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tv   U.S. House of Representatives  CSPAN  December 4, 2013 10:00am-9:01pm EST

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and remindblems people that the benefits of the affordable care act are for people. the caller and others are trying to resell the bill. host: we will have to leave it there, the house is coming in for their legislative session. viewers interested in the magazine, go to politico.com/magazine, follow the month twitter, thank you very much both of you for being here. appreciate it. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] and now live coverage of the house. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2013] 's room, washington, d.c., december 4, 2013. i hereby appoint the honorable paul cook to act as speaker pro tempore on this day. boehner, n a. speaker of the house of representatives. the speaker pro tempore: pursuant to the order of the house of january 3, 2013, the chair will now recognize members from lists submitted by the majority and minority leaders for morning hour ebate.
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the chair will alternate recognition between the parties with each party limited to one hour and each member other than the majority and minority leaders and the minority whip , but in o five minutes no event shall debate continue eyond 11:50 a.m. the chair recognizes the gentleman from north carolina, mr. jones, for five minutes. mr. jones: mr. speaker, thank you. yesterday, i came to the floor to speak about the bilateral strategic agreement and the fact that president karzai has refused to sign the proposal offered by the administration. since we have been in afghanistan, 2,285 americans have given their lives for our country and 19,514 have been
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wounded. the time has come for congress to understand history. from the days of alexander the great to the british to the russians, no one has ever changed afghanistan. the american people are tired of the cost of war, both life and money. as i said yesterday, it is my hope that in early 2014, the leadership of the house will permit a debate and a vote on the agreement that will obligate our country to afghanistan for at least 10 more years. i realize that the vote will not change the agreement, because the president does have the authority, but this will give us a chance to represent the people of america who the majority are opposed to this agreement. it is unacceptable that we will continue to spend billions of dollars at a time, according to special inspector general, the waste, fraud and abuse is worse
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in afghanistan today than it was 11 years ago. we in congress continue to cut funding for programs for the american people, but we refuse to hold one single dollar from karzai in afghanistan. no wonder the american people have given congress an approval rating of 9%. it is time to end the senseless waste of american lives and american money in afghanistan. i want to thank roger simon for his editorial in today's "politico," and i would like to read the last paragraph of his editorial. he writes, and i quote, is this the neighborhood we want to stay in? and fight for, question mark, and throw more money at, question mark. we have achieved our goals in afghanistan. we have won. it is time for our troops to come home. if we stay for another decade,
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our good war could come to a very bad end. so again, mr. speaker, it is my hope that when we get into 2014 that both parties will come together and say that we need to debate on whether this agreement for 10 years is worth one life or one dollar, and i believe it would be a vigorous debate. i think it will be good that the american people can see that we hear them as it relates to this war in afghanistan. mr. speaker, before i close i've got a poster from the greensboro news and record dated february 27 of 2011. it is the military carrying a flag-draped coffin off the back of a plane. how many more young americans will have to go and walk the roads of afghanistan and be killed and lose their limbs? i hope my colleagues in both
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parties will join those of us in both parties who want to have this debate on afghanistan in 2014. mr. speaker, i will close now by asking god to please bless our men and women in uniform, to bless the families of our men and women in uniform and god to hold in his arms the family who have given a child that died for freedom in afghanistan and iraq. with that, mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from oregon, mr. blumenauer, for five minutes. mr. blumenauer: thank you, mr. speaker. for as long as i've been in congress, both parties and two successive administrations have danced around the mission of our infrastructure deficit. for all the attention to the various fiscal cliffs, the looming infrastructure deficit is every bit as critical. for two centuries, infrastructure was a bipartisan issue, from lincoln with the transcontinental railroad to democrats and republicans coming together to launch the
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interstate freeway system, signed into law by president eisenhower, subsequent roads, transit and water investments helped fuel our economy and tie the nation together. more recently, the failure to address long-term funding has also been bipartisan. the bush administration ignored strong recommendations from their own private sector experts that they impaneled to give advice. although the obama administration did request and employ some modest funding in the recovery act and has proposed an infrastructure bank and talked extensively and i think sincerely about the need for investment, what has been lacking has been a specific concrete proposal from either party to address infrastructure financing in america. while the political maneuvering has secured here in washington, the gap in the highway trust fund has been growing and conditions of our roads, bridges and transit systems
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have been deteriorating. this puts america at a competitive disadvantage, complicates the movement of goods and people and contributes to congestion and pollution. at the same time, the needs grow, the resources are in significant decline. the gas tax has not been increased since the clinton administration 20 years ago. the future prospects are even worse. demands are increasing and deferred maintenance takes its toll while we watch the bottom fall out of the highway trust fund. we've seen a slowdown in revenue due to the near collapse of the economy, a shift in driving patterns while people, especially young people, drive less and improved fuel efficiency. it's scheduled to improve -- further reduce gascon sumpings dramatically with -- reduce gas consumption dramatically with plug in hybrid vehicles. it's time for congress to act. we've seen our partners at the
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state level increase transportation level in 13 states, but they need congress to act to maintain that partnership. there's a large coalition that stands ready to support congress. the u.s. chamber, the national afl-cio, building trades, trucking industry, numerous associations of small and medium-sized businesses, local chambers of commerce, local government, professional organizations, bicyclists,. the coalition is broad and persuasive, requesting congress to tax them. any resources would have a powerful effect on the economy. the relatively small amount in the recovery act for infrastructure created many jobs because there's a strong multiplier effect. about 36,000 jobs for each $1 billion invested. and these are family wage jobs all across america that aren't going to be outsourced overseas. in less than a year, the transportation bill expires and
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absent congressional action we face a precipitous drop in transportation funding, a reduction of 30% overall for the next decade. to be this way. i'm proposing we implement the three-step 15 cent gallon tax ncrease that was part of the simpson-bowles deficit reduction proposals. communities and industry need some certainty, especially for larger projects that are multistate and multiyear. and this should be the last federal gas tax increase. over the next 10 years, we need to replace funding for transportation that's based on gallons of fuel consumed, which is going to be declining, with something more sustainible. a reasonable adjustment now and a permanent fix in the future so we can stop this dance of avoidance. we will find broad support for this form of user fee which
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historically has been acceptable to republicans as well, including ronald reagan who increased the gas tax a nickel a gallon back when that was real money in 1982 and he established the mass transit trust fund account. let's address the infrastructure deficit, stabilizing transportation funding and help revitalize and enhance america's all-too-slow economic recovery. the time is now. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from oklahoma, mr. lankford, for five minutes. . lankford: i rise today for an admonition and a redirection. this is a philosophical conversation. america started with a great healthy reality of what government can do and what government cannot do. the government can't really control all of what's happening
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in every state from one central area. we begin at the very beginning with individual states, individual local governments, individuals making decisions for their family. right now we see in every poll and every conversation that every one of us has this great frustration that's rising among the american people. that frustration is not rising because the american vision, the american dream and the american spirit is failing. that frustration is rising because some what of what we're doing and because of this constant challenge that's occurring nationwide is the concept of a representative republic. the constant asking of a question, has this become too gridlocked, has it become too partisan, has it become too hard to get things done, maybe we need to do it a different way. quite frankly, the american people know in their hearts that they should be represented, they should be heard justice should be done,
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the basic principle among so many people that we should speak for those who cannot speak for themselves, that every american should be heard it goes from the book of proverbs to the very foundation of our constitutional system now. so what do we do about that? well, around the world we see it. we see the frustration of other people in other countries. we see it in syria as they're in a civil war. we see it in the streets of cairo. we see thailand, the corruption of their government. we see votes in the parliament in the ukraine as continent by continent, there's frustration for their government and people rise up in the streets. what do we do about it? how do we lead? we're the leaders in our country, so what do we do? here's my quick admonition to us. we're different. we think different. we function different.
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our families function different. but we should still be able to honor each other. we see each other's worst. we see on the social media sites and we see on the press reports and we see everything else, we know so much about each other that there's this sense that it's different now. quite frankly, americans have always been flawed people but we're people that are gathered around our work, our faith, our community and our family and that's made us different. we've got to stop demeaning a representative republic. this constant statement of gridlocked and things aren't working implies to people all over the country, maybe this system of government that made us the most powerful economy, the most powerful military, the greatest bastion of freedom, maybe it doesn't work anymore. the problem is not our constitution. the problem is we're trying to do something that's not that. we're shifting away from the way that we were founded into something that doesn't really exist. quite frankly, the partisan gridlock is not something new. the patron saint of oklahoma is will rogers.
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you can make every joke he made in congress in the 1920's and pull it up today and it's still funny because things haven't changed on that because quite frankly we think different. that's a nature of a country that's like ours. we've all these voices from all over the country that should come together and should work together but they should find us with solutions not getting into their life and taking things over. they need to see a government that's thinking for them, not trying to make them the servant. they see it. why do we have to vote this week about lead in fire hydrants? isn't that a no-brainer issue? that government has become so strong and so powerful in communities that communities are not sure if they can replace their fire hydrants anymore. why can't people get insurance anymore? they're waiting on a government website. why is it the education outcomes continue to decline when we increase federal control year after year after year but yet our outcomes continue to decline?
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even this week, another international poll coming out for that. why is it getting harder to start a company, find a job, pay your gas bill? why is it hard to fill up your gas and pay your cell phone? it's increasing fees and control and americans continue to get frustrated because they know this is not what we were designed to be. we're doing too many things. we've got to get back to trusting the american people, our state leaders, our local leaders and we've got to set the standard for what leadership looks like in america by our rhetoric and by our actions. we can honor people and honor each other even in our differences, but we've got to get back to doing this nation's business the way that american people in their heart know it should be done, where their voices are heard and where they get to make the decisions. with that i yield back. .
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the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from california, mr. miller, for five minutes. mr. miller: i ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. miller: mr. speaker, a year has passed since the 112 garment workers, mostly women, were killed in a factory in bangladesh that produced clothing for brands like wal-mart, sears, and kmart. earlier this year i went to bangladesh and met with women who left from the third and -- leapt from the third and fourth windos of their factories to escape the fire. there's no good way to jump from that height, and the women who survived the fall were broken, crippled, and unable to support their children. since the fire, several brands have stepped up with payment for survivors. yet some of the companies that were presumably profiting quite nicely from the production at the factory have opted not to compensate a single victim. wal-mart is one of those. they have chosen not to compensate a single woman who died in the factory, was
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crippled in the factory, lost their job in the factory. all because of a fire of an unsafe facktry. it was known as a deathtrap. windows were barred and the management lked the doors and stairwells and left workers with no way to escape. wal-mart knew this factory was a deathtrap. the company had commissioned a series of audits in 2011. their audits uncovered that it was an overcrowded factory without proper fire alarms or smoke detectors, that it lacked sufficient firefighting equipment with partially blocked exits and star wells and did not post adequate evacuation plans. because the factory management failed to improve the conditions, wal-mart terminated the contracts with the factory. however, the workers continued to produce for wal-mart. even though they terminated their contract. according to documents found in the ashes, more than half of the factory's total production was dedicated to wal-mart just two months before the collapse. so while wal-mart left the factory because it was unsafe,
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over half of the production, according to the documents, was still for wal-mart knowing they were producing in an unsafe factory that claimed the lives of 112 women. wal-mart now claims that the factory was unauthorized subcontractor. half of the work in the factory was there because supposedly wal-mart, whose hallmark of efficiency is their supply chain, didn't know their subcontractor was placing these very significant orders in a factory that they abavend beyond and was also owned -- abandoned and was also owned overall by another company they were doing business with. i think wal-mart is trying to construct a process so they can deny the responsibility for the deaths of the women, responsibility to pay maybe a benefit to those families who are crushed by the loss of their breadwinner, their mother, sister, their wife. it's time to accept that responsibility. when wal-mart terminated direct contracts at the factory, it never told the workers that it
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was leaving or why it was leaving. in a recent public forum, wal-mart said the only responsibility was to notify the factory owner, but that's like notifying a criminal you are aware of his crime while you keep his next potential victim in the dark. workers had no reason to suspect that wal-mart walked away due to safety concerns because wal-mart garments still dominated the production there. by quietly walking away and failing to tell anybody who could remedy the danger, workers, trade associations, or the government, wal-mart left it vulnerable to a fire that would engulf them. the wal-mart actions were calibrated to evade responsibility and they put those women at risk. the pattern of evasion was repeated at the plaza where over 1,132 workers, again, mostly women, were killed in a factory collapse earlier this year. wal-mart claims it did not permit production there, but evidence found in the rubble of that collapsed factory was -- shows that it was producing jeans for wal-mart less than a
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year before the collapse. there is a theme here. when tragedies occur, wal-mart claims production was not authorized as a way to disown responsibility. but every brand, sourcing garment from bangladesh knows the extensive subcontracting is part of the business model. that is how fast fashion is produced. you can cut your direct deelings with the specific factory, but there is a chance someone in your supply chain will subcontract right back to that factory. the ethics are not complicated. the united nations principles on business and human rights call on multinationals to conduct due diligence through the many layers of their supply chains where the risk is the greatest and to identify, mitigate, and prevent the problems. had wal-mart done that maybe 1,000 women would be alive today and not have a factory collapse on them. maybe 112 women would be alive today. maybe those women who had to jump out of the third and fourth window to survive the fire would not be crippled
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today, would be able to support their families and live somewhat of a normal life. audits don't absolve companies of responsibilities. if terminating a contract could lead to even greater harm, there is a special obligation, according to these recognized principles of the united nations, to stay and remedy the problem. brands have an osama bin laden gation to both audit working conditions and to help remedy the risk of the most vulnerable in the supply chain. wal-mart accepts responsibility and start doing business in a humane way. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from alabama, mr. brooks, for five minutes. mr. speaker, the science space and technology committee recently held a hearing on healthcare.gov cybersecurity threats. our bipartisan expert witness panel included dr. frederick check, a computer science professor at s.m.u., dr. ruben,
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a computer science professor at johns hopkins university, david kennedy, former chief security officer of dibold incorporated and currently the principal security consultant for trusted sec, and morgan write, formerly with cisco security and now c.e.o. of crowd sourced investigations. now i'm not a cybersecurity expert, but i can read the words of those who are. the s.s.t. committee's hearing charter informs members that in order to fully use healthcare.gov, american citizens must input or verify highly personal information such as date of birth and social security numbers for all family members, household salary, debt information, credit card information, place of employment, home addresses, and the like. information that is a
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treasure-trove for cybercriminals and identity thieves. further, the obamacare website interacts with the i.r.s. and social security administration databases thereby exposing americans to even greater risk of theft of their most private personal information. in their written testimony, these experts warn the following about the health care.gov website. quote, there are clear indicators that even basic security was not, not built into the healthcare.gov website, end quote. quote, the vast amount of healthcare.gov code also means asupplying industry standards, security practices is a task that can have no real chance of success. end quote. healthcare.gov, quote, creates massive opportunity for fraud, scams, deceptive trade
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practices, identity theft, and more, end quote. mr. speaker, these threats to american family finances prompted me to ask the panel of cybersecurity experts within, under obamacare, americans can seek compensation from the federal government for financial losses caused by use of healthcare.gov. in reply not one expert, not one indicated obamacare requires the federal government to compensate american citizens for cybersecurity financial losses caused by their forced use of the healthcare.gov website. if these experts are right, and if you are an american citizen who obeys obamacare dictates, and you suffer from identity theft or other financial losses, the white house response is essentially tough luck, you are on your own. well, that's unsatisfactory and unacceptable. i next asked the bipartisan
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panel of experts, quote, given healthcare.gov's security issues and assuming for the moment that you would be personally responsible for all damages incurred, if any, from your advice, would any of you advise an american citizen to use this website as the security issues now exist? their bipartisan responsible was a stunning and unanimous no . do not use the website because the security risk associated with healthcare.gov are simply too great. mr. speaker, the obamacare website, healthcare.gov, is the mother lode for identity theft, internet fraud, and other criminal activity. for emphasis, mr. speaker, a bipartisan panel of cybersecurity experts publicly warns that the healthcare.gov cybersecurity threat is so great that no one should use it. based on their expert advice, i concur and encourage all americans to avoid healthcare.gov, the obamacare
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website, in any way, shape, or form until its cybersecurity risks are fixed. mr. speaker, i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from texas, ms. jackson lee, for five minutes. ms. jackson lee: mr. speaker, with a lot of enthusiasm i rise to recognize and to acknowledge a renaissance man, a man with a sense of humor, along with his wife, yvette, determined to help to make the lives of children around the world much better. yes, he had a sense of humor and he was also a musician, and he visualized a day without hunger, hoping for it to be
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december 31, 2013. yank berry has many sides to him, but enthusiastically he takes each challenge, some that he's overcome in life, and put on the boxing gloves and simply won. i'm excited that he joined in partnership with gary u.s. bonds and muhammad ali, formed the global village champions foundation. not just for boxing, but really to take boxers and box the troubles of the world away. the course of his work he's served almost over one billion meals, 954 million on his way to a billion. he also doesn't take no for an answer and working to release five bulgarian nurses and a palestinian in libya a few years ago, not an easy task.
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so along with his 30-year music career, jamming with jimi hendrix, writing jingles, and, yes, singing with the kingsmen of louie, louie fame, we can be grateful that he and his wife turned to a very important challenge, the global village champion foundation, which strives to become the undisputed world leader in private humanitarian delivery of nutrition to needy persons everywhere, sustaining human life, and helping to eradicate hunger from the face of the earth. as someone who has worked with the congressional children's caucus, it excites me to note that he continues to provide continued support for the children that we are already supplying with meals and other necessities. he expands the global village champions team to include people with diverse skills and a determination to make a
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difference in the world. for more than 17 years he's joined with his friends, muhammad ali, gary u.s. bonds, they haven't boxed, they haven't sung, but they have worked to put a light in the darkness of lives of so many. his career has expanded many aspects, he even croat jingles. he even was -- wrote jingles. he even was able to put forward a unique form of music. but i would say one of his greatest challenges and greatest successes is that everywhere he goes he takes his product that he has developed and he changes the hearts and minds of those who are suffering. he started donating some of his food products to various charities and n.g.o.'s in canada and the u.s. soon yank's dear friend, muhammad, as i indicated joined the global village and they brought food, medical supply, clothing, and educational tools to refugee camps and orphannages in areas stricken
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by disaster all over the world om africa to bulgaria to places beyond our o imagination. well he worked with those like celine dion, michael jordan and many others. as a ruzz of his ongoing fight against hunger, mr. berry has received nearly two dozen awards since 1995, including the india humanitarian service award, the bohemian red cross humanitarian award, juarez, mexico, hands of love, and it goes on and on and on. . he does this for the simplicity of going into bulgaria where those fleeing from the oppression of syria were in camps that were not ready for humankind. because of his frustration and because of his heart, decided to look for a hotel that he
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could lease to move some of these desperate syrian refugees already oppressed, already having lost loved ones to hotels with clean running water, places for their family to be. as i chatted with him i was moved by the story of a family of 17. didn't think anything about it. to move them out of a room smaller than a classroom and to give them space in this hotel so they could live in dignity. maybe think about going back to a syria that is free of oppression and devastation. so it is good with his roots in our neighboring country, canada, he came here to the united states to make a difference. i'm delighted today to recognize mr. hank berry for his humanitarian service to all of the world and to be able to say to him well done in life, continue to serve and save others. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman
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from nebraska, mr. fortenberry, for five minutes. mr. fortenberry: mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. fortenberry: mr. speaker, it's been said there's nothing that's wrong in america that can't be fixed by what's right in america. now, clearly there are very significant difficulties in this body. there is turmoil in our health care system. the paralysis in washington, the sluggish economy, our fractured culture are all lending themselves to a deeper meaning, for ideals, for something to cling to. mr. speaker, we are quite fortunate where i live in nebraska to maintain a strong tradition and connection to the past which gives guidance to the time in which we live. but we don't often reflect upon our strength, and in the final analysis, it really is this. it's our land, it's our people and it's our values. recently in the heart of farm
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country, i had the pleasure of speaking with very attentive and engaged high school students eager to discuss the issues before our nation. we discussed the proud history of our country, the declaration of independence, the debates that will define us as to where we'll impas a country. go as ker, in -- we'll a country. as americans are more and more removed from farm life, we don't think about the contribution that rural life makes to the country as a whole. production agriculture remains a key strength of america's economy, and exciting new opportunities are also emerging. expanding domestic food markets such as those for natural and and organic foods provide new opportunities for new farmers. there is a new biobased economy
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which turns corn cobs into pop bottles and bringing about a new kind of american manufacturing based upon the resources of rural communities. another notable point is this, mr. speaker. young men and women from rural areas of america serve in the military and much more significant -- in much more significant numbers. farm policy has an important role in growing new opportunities in rural america. mr. speaker, we need to pass a farm bill. the arduous process of reconciling the house and senate versions of the legislation is now taking place, but it is important for all americans to understand that the farm bill is not just about farms or food but it is also a jobs bill, a trade bill, an energy bill, a conservation bill and even a national security bill. one out of every 12 jobs in the united states is related to agriculture.
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in the house version of the bill, i strongly support initiatives that help beginning farmers and ranchers start their agricultural operations. i support initiatives to promote the development of local food markets, tighten payment limitations and enact reasonable reforms to the snap program while also protecting those with food security needs. i'm hopeful that the final bill written will retain the important reforms that actually help save taxpayer money and ensure farmers receive important risk management tools. mr. speaker, a recent university of nebraska survey showed that a majority of students desire to move home to their rural hometowns given the right opportunity to provide for themselves and raise a family. in recent years, our state, through hard work, personal responsibility and responsible governance has distinguished itself as an ideal place to live and to work and to raise a family. more than any one piece of legislation, these are the
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deeper values that we need to nurture and protect. those of us in farm country have a great story to tell. we have the resources and sensible stewardship to use them responsibly. we have a great tradition of values that keeps us tethered to an honorable past which also serves as a guide for the future. and mr. speaker, i believe this will help america find her way. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from puerto rico, mr. pierluisi, for five minutes. mr. pierluisi: mr. speaker, over the last several months, stories about ad economic problems in the territory of puerto rico. it has generated anxiety for individuals and institutions that have invested in puerto rico's bonds and have cost
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island residents to relocate to the 50 states in unprecedented numbers. the statistics are staggering. in recent years, puerto rico's population has fallen by more than 4% while the number of puerto ricans living in the states have increased by over 45%. as puerto rico's representative in congress, it pains me to read the island's troubles especially i know my constituents are just as capable and industryous as any other person in other jurisdictions. puerto rico has enormous potential, but the reality is this potential is not being fulfilled. although the island's problems have certainly grown worse in recent months, it's difficult for policymakers and the american public to understand that these problems are not of recent. to the contrary, at least four
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decades, puerto rico's quality of life on the island has been far worse than any state, according to every indicators, including unemployment, average household income and the ratio of government debt to economic production. in other words, puerto rico's difficulties have endured in more or less the same form, regardless of who holds power in washington and san juan and irrespective of the policies they formulate. to be sure, fiscal mismanagement at the local level and insufficient attention at the federal level have both been factors contributed to puerto rico's problems, but the record clearly establishes that they're not the main factor. what then is the principal source of puerto rico's long standing woes? in an recent editorial, "the washington post" correctly identified the culprit, noting that the territory's economic problems are structural. traceable or ultimately to its
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modeled political status. curiously, "the post" then asserted, there will be time enough to debate the status issue later and puerto rico, for the time being, should concentrate on fixing its finances. in a letter to "post" editor, this is like a doctor recommending a medicine to alleviate a patient's symptoms but doing nothing to treat the underlying disease. as long as puerto rico remains a territory, denied federal spending and tax credit programs, forced to borrow heavily to make up the difference and not being able to vote for president and congressman who make laws, they'll manage rather than surmount its economic problems. this is the only reasonable conclusion to draw from decades of empirical evidence. a majority of my constituents understand this which is why they voted to reject territory
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status in a referendum held one year ago. the obama administration recognizes this as well, which is why it proposed the first federally sponsored status vote in puerto rico's history to resolve the issue once and for all. and finally, members of congress, from both bodies, comprehend this which is why 125 of them have co-sponsored legislation i introduced that provides for an up or down vote in puerto rico on the territory's admission as a state and outlines the steps the federal government will take if a majority of voters favor admission. there are many reasons to oppose puerto rico's territory status, which is unequal, undemocratic and un-american. one of the most important reasons why puerto rico must discard this status in favor of either statehood or nationhood is because the current status has failed and will continue to fail to provide the island's 3.6 million american citizens
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with the economic opportunities and the quality of life they deserve. those who refuse to acknowledge this fundamental truth for ideological reasons are doing a great disservice to the people of puerto rico. they are on the wrong side of history. thank you. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from pennsylvania, mr. hompson, for five minutes. mr. thompson: thank you, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, there's been much documented and published about the problems resulting from the affordable care act. millions of americans are waking up to the cancellation of health insurance policies and -- that they've depended on to meet their family's needs at an affordable price. skyrocketing premiums and deductible increases under the pressures of paying for coverage mandates that they do not want, they cannot afford and even have -- may have a moral objection to.
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the one area that's received hoe attention so far in this debate is what the impact will be on our hospitals where much of the needed health care is provided by caring and competent professionals. now, as a health care professional that served in rural hospitals for nearly 30 years as a therapist and manager, i'm confident that the future of rural and underserved urban hospitals is not good under the pressures and the mandates of obamacare. while some point tens of millions of americans who have some type of coverage, a plus for the bottom line of hospitals, i would encourage a closer and more thoughtful look. first, the c.b.o. has estimated that even after full implementation, there will still be tens of millions of americans uninsured. based on the current reports from across america, this may include a lot of middle-class americans who find themselves for the first time unable to afford what obamacare has dictated. for a hospital, that ensures
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the continuation of bad debt and charity care that hampers their balance sheets. for lower income individuals, now that has expanded medical insurance, hospitals will be paid 40 cents to 60 cents for every dollar of care they provide, not exactly a sustainible margin and more accurately a pathway to bankruptcy for hospitals when coupled with the new found population of uninsured. mixed in with the cost of commines that will be rolling out from the obama administration of the approximately 130 new regulatory agencies founded under the obamacare legislation. today, the cost of compliance with government mandates, including medicare billing and hipaa, just those two, account for a significant part of any hospital's overhead expenses. multiply this by 100, yet -- under the yet to be administered mandates and cost of care that will have a dramatic increase just to keep the doors open and lights on for every hospital. the human resources costs of providing health care coverage
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for hospitals whose number one asset is a qualified and trained employee will increase as the obamacare employer mandate is finally implemented just a year from now. finally consider the fees or taxes imposed on hospitals in 2014. just weeks away. earlier this week, a hospital c.e.o. from my congressional district reported that, quote, we're going to have to pay close to $200,000 next year as will every hospital, end quote. hospitals will see other various fees, including a $5,000 levy so the government can do research on the effectiveness of hospitals working within the plan. additionally, hospitals will pay a $19,500 health insurers fee and a -- another fee that will protect insurance companies against the risk of winding up with additional high-risk customers. these are added cost to hospitals that we rely on for the access to health care. i have to wonder what now is so
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affordable about the affordable care act. bankrupt hospitals serve no one. americans deserve better. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from connecticut, ms. delauro, for five minutes. ms. delauro: 27 years ago i was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. i was lucky. i had excellent doctors who detected the cancer by chance in stage one. i underwent radiation treatment for 2 1/2 months. and because of the grace of god and biomedical research, i stand here today and i am rtunate to say that i have been cancer free ever since.
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i can tell you for a fact that access to preventive health care saved my life. if my ovarian cancer had not been diagnosed and caught in stage one, i might not be here today. but many women are not so lucky. over 15,000 die every year from ovarian cancer. and while i survived by that off chance of luck in that diagnosis, no one, no one hould have to survive by luck, which is why my democratic
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colleagues and i worked hard, we worked very hard to make re that prevention and wellness are such a critical part of the affordable care act , and before we passed this transformative piece of legislation, one in five women over age 50 had not had a mammogram in the past two years , mostly because they could not afford one. now mammograms are covered, they are covered for all americans with no out-of-pocket costs. o are annual checkups, colonoscopies, diabetes, and other cancer screenings at no
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cost. let me repeat that, they are the beneficiaries of lifesaving .reatments, preventive care this not only helps to keep americans healthier, it also helps to drive down the cost of health care so that people can get access to the services that they need, chronic and often preventable diseases such as heart disease and diabetes cause seven out of 10 deaths in the united states of america. and they account for 75% of our health spending. preventive care can help americans avoid these ailments or catch them before it is too late. that is what the affordable care act does.
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that's what the people of this country need to know that their countless story after story after story of people's lives being saved because they have a opportunity to get treatment or a -- something that says you may be at risk for a particular disease and you can get that identification not by luck, not by luck but as a routine checkup. no one in the united states of america should survive by luck. now we have an opportunity through the affordable care act, which is the law of the and today, to make sure that everyone, man and woman, can get those services. so if you expand access to
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preventive health, it drives the cost down, but most importantly, it saves lives. isn't that worth doing is to be able to save someone's life? that's what the affordable care act is all about and it is just one of the many ways that it is good for men, for women, for families in this nation. and it's good for america to move in this direction. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from ohio, ms. kaptur, for five minutes. ms. kaptur: thank you. mr. speaker, so, here's a "jeopardy" he question for you. how many days is the republican majority now overdue in getting its work done to produce a udget for the nation for 2014?
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our nation needs a budget to operate the government of the united states for the upcoming year. by law april 15 was the deadline by which the budget was to have been completed. but that hasn't happened. now it's december 4, so that means that their bill is 234 days overdue. in fact, technically the federal fiscal year began october 1. the majority's bill is actually seven months and 20 days overdue. a parking ticket that old might land you in jail. not making your car payments for seven months might likely result in your car being repossessed. right? the budget committee is supposed to finish its one
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bill, one bill by april 15, but they just can't seem to find a way to do it. then if they were to have done that, the appropriations committee, which depends on the budget committee for a total budget number, could get its work done to produce not just mandated bills it is to move through passage to run the federal departments of the government of the united states of america. everything from the forest service to veterans clinics, to the social security administration, department after department. the american people are waiting for this house, led by the republican majority, to get the job done of producing the 2014 budget. america doesn't need anymore
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beauty pictures of committee chairs prancing and posturing in front of cameras. they need to go into the committee rooms and get the work done. the majority is 234 days overdue tomorrow it will be 235 days overdue. my goodness, there are only 26 days left in this calendar year . even santa claus must be shaking his head in disbelief. talk about running the ship of state aground, let the majority produce the budget bill. it's way over time. don't hold up our republic anymore. you're 234 days overdue, and we are all counting. mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of my time.
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the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman from wisconsin, ms. moore, for five minutes. ms. moore: thank you so much, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, i rise today to implore you and the house majority to reach across the aisle to find common ground, to reach out their hands and to fix our broken immigration system. mr. speaker, last summer republicans and democrats in the senate came together and passed comprehensive immigration reform with a strong bipartisan vote, a vote of 68 to 32. 68-32. that's like a superduper majority. in fact, one poll last month showed that 63% of americans, 2/3 of americans, support a
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path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. business leaders, chambers of commerce, labor unions, faith groups, immigrant families, law enforcement officials, and americans of every race, creed, color, and ethnicity all across our country applauded our senators for reaching across the aisle. for many it really gave hope and belief in our government that we are still capable of putting aside political posturing and to build consensus around the difficult issues that face our country. but today as i speak americans are asking, what happened? they are confused as to why the house of representatives can't do the same thing that the senate did and pass immigration reform. they are even more confused as to why the house can't even dignify the issue with a simple
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up or down vote. and those people have not gone away, mr. speaker, oh, no. in fact, today the call to action is still as loud and clear as it has ever been. just yesterday i visited the fast for families movement on the national mall where faith leaders have actually been fasting for 22 days, 22 days with no food. some were hospitalized, to safely break the fast per the doctor's orders, but others pressed on. replacement fasters stepped up, including our own representative kennedy who, in the lega siff his grandfather, bobby -- legacy of his grandfather, bobby, acknowledged the need to embrace the immigrant issue. so i ask my colleagues in the majority on the other side of
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the aisle, what are we waiting for? our job creators want reform. our work force wants it. our spiritual leaders say it's the right thing to do. and overwhelmingly so do the american people. the facts are so clear that reform will tremendously benefit all of our country. in fact, the congressional budget office has followed the money and they estimate that immigration reform will increase gross domestic product $700 billion in 2023, and $1.4 trillion in 2033. but here we are today facing government shutdowns and sequester levels that eviscerate services so that many vulnerable americans rely on and this is where we are stuck. it's been five months, five months since the senate passed their bill, and yet we have only six days scheduled until
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the end of the year, and we haven't had one serious vote on immigration reform. americans have put their differences aside for the common good of our country and they expect us to do the same thing in this our beloved democracy. once again i want to reiterate that i stand here ready to work with my colleagues on the other side of the aisle to move our country forward, and i applaud my brave colleagues on the other side that have already taken a stand and put politics aside, and i encourage more of my colleagues to answer that calling and meet us halfway. the american people are fed up with the status quo and gridlock here in washington. let's come together and strengthen our business, our economy, our work force, and our families. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the
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gentlewoman from illinois, mrs. bustos, for five minutes. mrs. bustos: thank you, mr. speaker. i rise today to talk about a piece of legislation i will be introducing that will help put our brave veterans back to work in good-paying jobs in the communities across our country. it is called the jobs for heroes act. good for vets and good for the economy. it would extend and expand two tax credits for businesses that prioritize hiring veterans. both of these tax credits are set to expire at the end of the month without congressional action. the time to act is now. last month i traveled to all corners of my district to meet with local veterans to listen to their priorities and to their concerns. i also hosted an economic summit attended by roughly 200 people who i am here to serve. this was all about jobs and all about the economy.
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and this is also about our veterans. making sure veterans have access to good-paying jobs came up everywhere i went, from rock island to rockford, and literally everywhere i went. legislation to help prioritize the hiring of veterans is especially crucial due to the high unemployment rate of young veterans. veterans between the ages of 18 and 24 have an unemployment rate of more than 20%. that's 5% higher than nonveterans of the same age. that is absolutely shameful. i hope all members of congress will join me in supporting my commonsense bill to help put veterans back to work and to making sure that those who have served always remain a priority. good for veterans, good for the economy and good for america. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back.
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the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from california, mr. swalwell, for five minutes. mr. speaker, today i rise to recognize sergeant first class jason manila who won the commissioner of the year during the armies' competition. jason is from my district in fremont, california and recently moved within my district to hayward, california. the army's best warrior competition is a three-day event that test the soldier's physical and mental toughness. sergeant manila is the first-ever reservist to win this prestigious army-wide title. sergeant manila is a member of battalion. 445th
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and while serving in afghanistan in 2012, sergeant manila had his convoy attacked, and while it was attacked it left him with a traumatic brain injury. sergeant manila's story is one of hope and the power of resilience. as part of sergeant manila's recovery, he focused on training for the army's best warrior competition. back in august of this year, i had the opportunity to visit afghanistan. i was able to meet with soldiers, men and women serving from california's 15th congressional district. over in afghanistan, i saw firsthand what our men and women in the armed services endure each day to make sure that we rid afghanistan as a breeding ground for terrorism and make sure that never again the united states is attacked from enemies created abroad. i'm very thankful for those like sergeant manila and those i met in afghanistan, and i know that operation enduring
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freedom has led to thousands of americans being wounded, who served over in afghanistan and are healing today back home on their own path to recovery. sergeant manila's story is truly one that is uplifting for every soldier, man and woman, who is recovering. congratulations, again, to sergeant manila. your strength, your determination and your character is an inspiration to thousands of other wounded men and women of our armed services. with that, mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from california, mr. mcclintock, for five minutes. mr. speaker, the house judiciary committee yesterday raised the overarching question of our generation. will the american constitution stand? all the laws passed under that constitution have elaborate
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enforcement mechanisms backed by armed force, but the constitution itself has no enforcement mechanism. it was designed to be internally self-enforcing with the powers of government clearly divided among three separate and equal branches of government. but this self-enforcement mechanism can only work when the powers are evenly divided, when those who exercise those powers are devoted to the constitution and when the merican people insist on it. that is the great question for our generation. are we allowing the constitution to disintegrate before our eyes? the constitution makes very clear that only congress may make laws and that the principle responsibility of the executive is to take care that the laws be faithfully executed. yet, the executive branch is increasingly asserted sweeping powers to unilaterally nullify
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laws that it dislikes, to pick and choose who must obey the law and who need not and even to impose entirely new laws that congress has explicitly refused to enact. james madison, the father of the constitution, said that the single most important feature was giving the legislative and not the executive branch the decision over war or peace. yet, the executive now asserts the authority to attack other nations without congressional authorization. the bill of rights protect every american from retributions, for expressing their political beliefs. it protects a free press from intimidation. it protects the free and open expression of religious beliefs. it protects the means of individuals to protect themselves and their freedom. it protects every individual from having their records searched or their properties seized without due process of law. and yet these fundamental rights have been made a mockery by the agents of this administration, from the i.r.s.
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to the justice department to the n.s.a. the -- this began long before this administration but under this administration it has become a crisis. all this, we're told, is for the common good. well, it wouldn't be the first civilization to succumb to the song of a benevolent and all-powerful government, but every society that's fallen for this lie is awakened one morning to discover that the benevolence is gone and that the all-power government is still there. much of this structure of the american constitution that has preserved our liberty for 225 years, that has contained the unwarded expansion of governmental power and has preserved the natural and individual rights of every citizen has been allowed to decay. the form is still there, the institutions continue to function, but they no longer serve their principal role to protect the rule of law and the liberty of the people.
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here in this capitol, we're surrounded by the symbols of the roman republic. they should be a warning to us. the roman senate continued to exist 400 years after the fall of the republic, but its nature and purpose had become empty. chairman goodlatte quoted gibbon yesterday who observed that the principles of a free constitution are irref kabully lost when the legislative power is dominated by the executive. that is precisely what is happening. the institutions of our american republic continue to operate, but the structures within it are rapidly degrading. in this condition, our constitution is becoming like a rotting porch. we can still discern its form and purpose, but the structure that gave it strength and support is hallowing out through years of abuse and neglect until one day it will simply collapse. the judiciary committee hearing yesterday was the first step by congress to assess the harm already done and to begin reversing that damage before
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it's too late. but i must warn that in its current divided condition congress cannot do so alone. ultimately it will require the active assistance of the rightful owners of that constitution, the american people. how ironic it would be if the liberties of this nation, heroically defended by nine generations of americans on far off battlefields might be carelessly thrown away here at home. let that not be said about our generation. let it be said instead just when our constitution seemed most in peril this generation rows up, insist -- rose up, insisted on the constitution by those elected and then went on to revive, restore and preserve that constitution for the many generations of americans who followed. yield back. the speaker pro tempore: pursuant to clause 12-a of rule 1, the chair declares the house noon today.til
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quote
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you can watch that hearing live, the veterans' affairs subcommittee, at 3:00 eastern on c-span2. at the white house today in just a few minutes, president obama is expected to be talking about the economy, reiterating his call for raising the minimum wage. he's speaking at an event at the center for american progress. we'll have that live for you once it gets under way here on c-span. >> friday on c-span -- "washington journal" looks at the mission and role of the national institutes of health starting live at 7:00 eastern with director francis collins on future projects and the impact of sequestration. at 8:00, allergy and infectious disease anthony fauci followed by director green, director of the human genome institute. at 9:00, national institutes
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director harold varmus and at 9:30, a look at the national institutes of mental health with dr. thomas insel live on c-span. >> we'll have president obama talking about the economy coming up in a few minutes. it's scheduled for 11:15 a.m. eastern. until then, some house republican reaction to discussions on the iran nuclear program. host: congressman, let me begin with the iran nuclear deal. in "the washington post" this morning, this is how they begin their story. host: which do you think it is? guest: i don't think anything
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has changed. i think those probably completely wrong. i think iran will be doing what it has been doing for the last decade, keep enritching. if they stop short enritching to a nuclear capability, they'll be building up their ballistic missiles and their ability to reach out further and further and hit southeast europe and hit different parts of israel. so even if they stop their -- the enrichment capability just short of what's permissible under this new deal, they'll be able to spread to that in a month or two and arm their ballistic weapons which they're still making in droves. so i don't think this does anything, frankly, except give them kind of a leg up and some cover in the international community. that's what this is doing, in my opinion. i don't think it's going to be a -- we're not going towards a safer world because they're not actually having to do anything with this deal yet. in fact, nothing starts until six months out in this deal. so i don't think this is a good
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deal for the united states or for the rest of the free world. host: what about it don't you like? what would you change? comboip it doesn't make them change. i would make them show us they stopped everything. put them to the iaea, to us, the rushesans, whatever international partners want to go in and stop building centrifuges and stop enritching. then at that point, once all that is verified, then you say, ok, we're going to lower those sanctions. you don't lower the sanctions first and just pray iran will do the right thing for once in my generation because they proved over and over the last 30, 40 years they don't do the right thing ever. why assume this time? it seems like it would be folly and almost ridiculous to think they're going to be different this team just because when over the last generation they haven't been -- they haven't been honest, trustworthy and haven't done what they said they're going to do. host: congressman meeks, gregory meeks of new york,
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democrat, who sits on the foreign affairs committee, was on the show yesterday and is in favor of this deal. i want to show you what he had to say and get your reaction. >> i think when you look at the agreement in its totality and how it was negotiated, clearly with the transparency that has never happened before and where we would be had we not had this agreement. see, if this agreement was in place it wouldn't stop iran from continuing to enrich and move toward a nuclear weapon. this agreement stops that. so that's significant. and in return, we're not removing the sanctions that was placed on iran by the congress. we're talking about really iran billion and d $8 $9 billion primarily for humanitarian and medicine purposes which is minuscule compared to the oil sanctions
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continue and iran continues to lose $30 billion, $40 billion. so the $8 billion or $9 billion of relief they get is nothing in comparison to the continued sanctions that is placed upon them. host: congressman, your thoughts? guest: with all due respect to congressman meeks, the state department actually said, jim said the next step here is a continuation of technical discussions at working levels so we can tee up the implementation of the agreement. obviously once that's done, those technical discussions are worked through, i guess the clock would start. meaning there is no deal right now. there is -- iran is having to do absolutely nothing. america and our international partners are giving them stuff right now, giving them sanctions and nice to them and overturs. they are doing nothing. iran is still enriching. iran is still building ballistic missiles and the ability to launch their nuclear
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capability. and once again, even if they stop enritching right now, that doesn't mean within two months when their supreme ayatollah says we want nuclear capability, it takes them a month and a half to get there, it's not unacceptable. it shouldn't be acceptable to israel and the rest of the international community. host: you write -- host: you go on to say -- to think of iran as any differently than what happened in north korea would be foolish. explain. guest: absolutely. iran i think is a much more dangerous foe. north korea has china to keep it in check. they have russia to some extent. south korea. north korea is kept in check, you hope, by china, economically and wanting a peaceful resolution.
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iran doesn't have that. there is no check on iran. there is no india-pakistan check. iran has no check but the united states and those sanctions right now because there is no -- there is no country there besides israel in that community that has -- that has or will have the same nuclear capability. to be frank, with iran's government the way that it is, driven by radical extremist muslims, that's different from a self-preservation mindset that north korea has and kind of the old soviet model, that's different from iran's government. when you have them sponsoring terrorism, that hasn't stopped right now. they're still sponsoring terrorism, syria, iraq, all over. these sanctions do nothing towards that meaning iran hasn't changed at all and there is no check on them. that's why i think they're more dangerous. when you will you a blow yourself up for your god, that makes you more dangerous than the sense of self-preservation
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that most people in most countries have. that makes them easier and pretty much -- i would say they're more honest. other countries are in wanting to stay alive. i don't think the iranians have that. a lot of folks i saw in afghanistan and iraq when i was over there, they don't have that sense of self-preservation. they don't mind-blowing themselves up. they don't mind strapping bombs onto kids. host: congressman, after the september 11 attacks in 2001, quit his job, joined the marine corps and served in iraq. how many times? guest: twice in iraq. host: where? guest: where babylon is in 2003. and the first battle of fallujah in 2004 and afghanistan in 2007. host: do you think war with iran is inevitable? guest: i sure as hell hope not. let's put it that way. i think a ground war in iran with american boots on the ground would be a horrible thing.
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i think people like to toss around the fact that we have to stop them in some way from giving them this nuclear capability. i think it's inevitable. if you hit iran, do you it with tactical nuclear devices and set them back a decade or two or three. that's what you do with a massive aerial bombardment campaign but that's still a huge undertaking. it would cost billions and billions of dollars to do it. no, i don't think especially after iraq and afghanistan, i think america now knows its limitations in that area and what we can do. do we want to spend 20 years there after we tear it down to build it back up again so it's not ran by a crazy tyrannical leader what happened in iraq and afghanistan again? you have crazy guys running things there. what we've set it up have played a role in those countries not being great actors still. host: the phones are lighting up. we'll get to our first phone call in a second. congressional action on this,
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secretary of state john kerry, the white house has asked members of congress not to go ahead and vote on a new round of sanctions against iran. secretary of state is going to testify next week before the house foreign affairs committee. will congress wait until after he testifies? guest: congress should not wait. i think what you have in the administration in this bubble which exists in congress and in the administration, too, i think they are so in love with the idea of just saying they did something here, whether it works or not, that they're blind to the reality. and so i think we should proceed with sanctions. let the iranians know this is not an american deal with them. this is a kerry-obama deal with them and that the rest of congress is not behind them. i think the senators, too, that the u.s. senate, they still want to impose sanctions as well. this is going to be very hard for them to say, ok, we're just going to trust iran and hope they do the right thing for the first time in 40 years and we'll see what happens. host: william is up first in athens, ohio, democratic caller.
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hi, william. caller: hi. congress, the evidence that the world trade center building seven was brought down with explosives on 9/11 is real and proven. more and more people are waking up to it every day. how much more trust does congress have to lose before it faces reality and acknowledges the need for a new investigation into building seven's destruction? guest: i don't think it needs any more investigation. i think the way that those towers were brought down by islamic radical terrorists and i think every investigation has shown that so far. host: did you read the 9/11 investigation by the committee? guest: no. host: you think it was adequate enough? guest: yeah, i think so. host: lake placid, independent caller. caller: good morning, representative hunter. i remember in the past, president clinton, he was dealing with china. they were having a problem with their missiles and their launch pads, getting off the launch pads and their guidance
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systems. after they made deals with clinton, it appeared that clinton sold them or gave them a guidance system for their icbm's and they were able to successfully launch their icbm's with accuracy. it wasn't long after that, just a few months after that that their minister of war was threatening the united states over taiwan. also, you got to remember when madeleine albright went to north korea and dealt with over eader at that time -- it was nuclear power plant and supposedly they wanted nuclear -- they wanted uranium for the nuclear power plant. they took that uranium and they refined it and they made it into a nuclear weapon. they also got missile systems
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from china. i do not trust this administration dealing with iran at all. i think we'll come out on the losing end of it. host: ok. congressman. guest: i agree. host: why, explain. guest: because all the things he said i basically said the same thing. host: american hero tweets in this -- why don't you lower the sanctions first? as a gesture, you can put the sanctions back, can't you? guest: yeah. it's harder that way. once you let the monkeys out of the barrel here, you'll have iran getting into opec now. they'll have to make room for them producing oil. it's going to let the iranians know, hey, we're going to reward you for being bad. and whether you raise kids or anything like that, you know you don't reward bad behavior. you reward good behavior. why do anything when the behavior has only been bad until this point? i don't understand the logic. once again, it seems like total
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folly to believe iran will act totally differently than it's ever acted before in the last 40 years. i think that's just kind of silly to believe that they're going to change all of a sudden just because. i don't think it's going to happen. host: so the new round of sanctions -- guest: we have to deal with the world the way it is, not the way we would like it to be. we know the iranians are bad actors. we have to keep that in mind. we have been burned. if you go back during the cold war, we have been burned by trusting that the people that we're negotiating with are negotiating in good faith like we are. not everybody's america. not everybody has that honesty or integrity, transparency that we have in this country and whether you're talking about the soviet union and china and north korea, we've gotten burned over and over because we trust but don't verify. host: independence day, though, asks this -- congressman, is america prepared to lead by
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example and destroy all of its refinement and enrichment hardware? guest: we are not a bad actor. america is not a sponsor of terrorism. iran is. host: christian is a democratic caller from oklahoma. caller: i will say, first of all, i cannot believe that this gentleman who was lied to when he went to iraq isn't more upset about bush and his administration sending and killing 2,300 of our soldiers, spending trillions of dollars, all right, basically bankrupting us. and then also think about the thousands of soldiers that are coming back maimed. but this guy wants to talk about, let's not give peace a chance. i would think you would talk to your buddy, issa, and find out why the bush administration sent you and your boys and friends over there without the proper body armament. and for you to sit up here and talk about being disingenuous,
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look at what the republicans have done to the middle east in the last 10 years. another thing i'd like to say. like my brother said the other day, you guys always say that israel is our closest ally. how many israelis soldiers died in the afghanistan war? how many israeli soldiers died when we were over there or you were over there fighting in iraq? all right. we always talk about israel this, israel that. another thing, israel would not even join our coalition. remember, you republicans were making fun of president obama. oh, he can't have anybody follow or get in his coalition. if israel was our brothers, they should have been the first ones with our coalition. host: ok. we'll take that point, christian. guest: first thing, christian, with israel, we didn't want them in our coalition, as you say, because there's some problems between israel and palestine. it would make things more complex and we wouldn't have been able to get a lot of our partners and allies that we got in iraq and afghanistan if israel had been part of it.
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i think israel understands that. at the same time, israel helped us throughout the wars in iraq and afghanistan with intelligence and other things like that. but putting them in the coalition and having israeli boots on the grounds in these countries i think would have more detriment than benefit. number two, president bush didn't kill any soldiers, marines or sailors. radical islamic terrorists did. i think we went into iraq for the right reasons. you know, we know now that assad has used this -- these chemical weapons that iraq had, that those iraqi chemical weapons went straight to syria and assad has had them sense. i think we went in there for the right reasons. i think we underestimated what we needed to do after the initial attack and after taking over the entire country what it would take to build it back up again. i think you see now -- i did two tours in iraq. a lot of my marine brothers lost their lives there or came
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back wounded, as you say. because of this president we don't have a single soldier -- i think we have about -- between 50 and 100. we don't have a standing military presence in iraq right now. so iran is left unchecked by iraq. syria is left unchecked by iraq. and the 10 years we spent there now, we don't have anything to show for it. we don't have an oil deal, anything, because this president squandered what our military did for 10 long years in that war. host: want to get your thoughts on the impact this deal might have on peace in the middle east and that region. "the washington post" has a piece this morning that says, turkey, for example, a staunch backer of syria's rebels have joined iran. host: is that a positive outcome of this nuclear deal? guest: sure.
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i don't think turkey wants iran to have a nuclear weapon either. these nations, they're either going to believe this and maybe they truly believe that iran has changed and they turned around and going to be really good right now. in that case they're hoping that they do so they don't have a nuclear neighbor. i don't think any of these nations want nuclear neighbors. i tell you what, if iran goes nuclear, saudi arabia goes nuclear, a lot of those gulf states go nuclear and they're going to do it very quickly. you're going to have a nuclear middle east. just take how combustible it is now prenuclearization and think of all these nations that have all this infighting and all of these civil wars and strife going on but then give them all nuclear weapons. that's going to happen if iran gets a nuke. because one country won't have them have one if they don't. you'll have a nuclear middle east. that's not safe for anybody. that can't be allowed to happen.
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host: i think that answers this tweet from vivian that says -- it sounds like congressman duncan says that congress doesn't want peace in the middle east, doesn't want peace with iran. that's very odd. guest: once more, you have to be a realist on this. it's not about wanting peace. just because the united states wants peace doesn't doesn't happens. peace you have to look in the past 30 years and look how bad they acted and say are they going to change just like that or are they going to keep doing what they've been doing? and once again, if they get a nuclear weapon, every country in that area will have a nuclear weapon. and the question also comes, how far do you let them enrich? because president obama's plan with them, this deal allows them to enrich uranium to a certain point. it's only -- it only takes a few months to go from that point to nuclearization. so if that's where you want to have them where iran is two months away from having a nuclear weapon at all times, if that makes everybody happy,
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then that's pretty scary. host: back to "the washington post." they also write this -- headline what do you think about this and explain it a little bit? guest: i think this administration likes to make friends with our past foes and kind of ignore our allies. i think this kind of plays into that. the saudis, not being the greatest country in the world -- >> "washington journal" live every day at 7:00 a.m. eastern. we'll take you live now in washington, center for american progress is hosting president obama. he'll be speaking about the economy. >> thank you. thank you, everybody. thank you so much. thank you.
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thank you, everybody. please, please have a seat. thank you so much. well, thank you for the wonderful introduction and sharing a story that resonated with me. there were a lot of parallels in my life and probably resonated with some of you. over the past 10 years, the center for american progress has done incredible work to shape the debate over expanding community for all americans. i could not be more grateful to cap not only for giving me a lot of good policy ideas but also giving me a lot of staff. [laughter] my friend, john, padesta, ran my transition. my chief of staff, dennis, did a stinted cap. so you obviously are doing a good job training folks. i also want to thank all the members of congress and my administration who are here
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today for the wonderful work that they do. i want to thank mayor gray and everyone here at the arc for having me. this center, which i've been to quite a bit and have had a chance to see some of the great work here, and all the nonprofits that call thearc home has everything from education, safe shelter from the streets, which means that your hardest thing, the power of community, to expand community for -- expand opportunity for folks here in d.c. and your work reflects a tradition that runs through our history. the belief that we're getter together than we are on our own. and that's what i've come here to talk about today. over the last two months, washington's been dominated by some pretty contentious debates. i think that's fair to say. and between a reckless shutdown by congressional republicans in an effort to repeal the
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affordable care act and admittedly poor execution on my administration's part in implementing the latest stage of the new law, nobody's acquitted themselves these very past few months. so it's not surprising that the american people's frustrations with washington are at an all-time high. but we know that people's frustrations run deeper than these most recent political battles. their frustration is rooted in their own daily's battles, to make ends meet, to pay for college, buy a home, save for retirement. it's rooted in the nagging sense that no matter how hard they work, the deck is stacked against them. and it's rooted in the fear that their kids won't be better off than they were. they may not follow the constant back and forth in washington or all the policy
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details, but they experience in very personal way the relentless decades' long trend that i want to spend some time talking about today and that is a dangerous and growing inequality and lack of upward mobility that has jeopardized middle-class america's basic bargain that if you work hard you'll have a chance to get ahead. i believe this is the defining challenge of our time. making sure our economy works for every working american. that's why i ran for president. it was the center of last year's campaign. it drives everything i do in this office, and i know i raised this issue before and some will ask why i raise the issue again right now. i do it because the outcomes of the debates we're having right now, whether it's health care
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or the budget or reforming our housing and financial systems, all these things will have real practical implications for every american and i am convinced that the decisions we make on these issues over the next few years will determine whether or not our children will grow up in an america where opportunity is real. now, the premise that we're all created equal is the opening line in the american story. and while we don't promise equal outcomes, we've strived to deliver equal opportunity. the idea that success doesn't depend on being born into wealth or privilege, it depends on effort and merit. with every chapter we've added to that story, we've worked hard to put those words into practice. it was abraham lincoln, a self-described poor man's son
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who started the system of land grant colleges all over this country so that any poor man's son could go learn something new. when farms gave way to factories, a rich man's son named teddy roosevelt fought for an eight-hour work day, protections for workers and busted monopolies that kept prices high and wages low. when millions lived in poverty, f.d.r. fought for social security and minimum wage. when millions died without health insurance, l.b.j. fought for medicare and medicaid. together we forged a new deal, declared a war on poverty and a great society. we built a ladder of opportunity to climb and stretched out a safety net beneath so if we fell it wouldn't be too far and we could bounce back. and as a result, america built
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the largest middle class the world has ever known. and for the three decades after world war ii, it was the engine of our prosperity. now, we can't look at the past through rose colored glasses. the economy didn't always work for everyone. racial discrimination locked millions out of poverty -- out of opportunity. women were too often confined to a handful of often poorly paid professions, and it was only through painstaking struggle that more women and minorities and americans with disabilities began to win the right to more fairly and fully participate in the economy. nevertheless, during the post-world war ii years, the economic ground felt stable and secure for most americans. and the future looked brighter than the past. and for some that meant falling in your old man's footsteps at
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the local plant and you knew that a blue-collar job would let you buy a home and a car, maybe a vacation once in a while, health care, a reliable pension. for others it meant going to college. in some cases maybe the first in your family to go to college. and it meant graduating without taking on loads of debt and being able to count on advancement through a vibrant job market. now, it's true that those at the top, even in those years, claimed a much larger share of income than the rest. the top 10% consistently took home about 1/3 of our national income. but that kind of inequality took place in a dynamic market economy where everyone's wages and incomes were growing. and because of upward mobility, the guy on the factory floor could picture his kid running the company someday.
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but starting in the late 1970's, this social compact began to unravel. technology made it easier for ompanies to do more with less, eliminating certain job occupations. a more competitive world let companies ship jobs anywhere. as good manufacturing jobs automated or headed offshore, workers lost their leverage, jobs paid less and offered fewer benefits. as values of communities broke down and competitive pressure increased, businesses lobbied washington to weaken unions and the value of the minimum wage. as a trickle down ideology became more prominent, taxes were slashed for the wealthiest while investments in things that make us all richer like schools and infrastructure,
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were allowed to wither. and for a certain period of time, we could ignore this weakening economic foundation in part because more families were relying on two earners, as women entered the work force. we took on more debt financed by a juiced up housing market. but when the music stopped and crisis hit, -- and the result is an economy that's become profoundly unequal. and families that are more nsecure. since 1979, when i graduated from high school, our productivity is up by more than 90%. but the income of the typical family has increased by less than 8%.
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since 1979, our economy has more than doubled in size. but most of that growth has flowed to a fortunate few. the top 10% no longer takes in 1/3 of our income. it now takes half. whereas in the past, the average c.e.o. made about 20 to 30 times of the average income of the worker, now it is more. meanwhile, a family in the top 1% has a net worth 288 times higher than the typical family which is a record for this country. so the basic bargain at the heart of our economy has frayed. in fact, this trend towards growing inequality is not unique to america's market economy. across the developed world, inequality has increased. some of you may have seen just
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last week the pope himself spoke about this at eloquent length. how can it be, he wrote, that it's not a news item when an elderly homeless person dies of exposure but it is news when the stock market loses two points? but this increasing inequality is most pronounced in our country, and it challenges the very essence of who we are as a people. understand we've never begrudged success in america. we aspire to it. we admire folks who start new businesses, create jobs, invent the products that enrich our lives and we expect them to be rewarded handsomely for it. in fact, we've often accepted more income inequality than many other nations for one big reason -- because we were convinced that america is a
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place even if you were born with nothing, with a little hard work, you can improve your situation over time and build something better to leave your kids. asselin cononce said, while we do -- as lincoln once said, while we do not impose war on the rich, we ask the humblest man a chance to get rich like everybody else. the problem is that alongside increased inequality we've seen diminished levels of upward mobility in recent years. has ld born in the top 20% three chance staying at the top. a child born in the bottom 20% has a chance of less than one in 20 chance of making it to the top. he's 10 times likelier to stay where he is. in fact, statistics show that not only our levels of income inequality rank countries like
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jamaica and argentina, but that it is harder today for a child born here in america to improve her station in life than it is for children in most of our wealthy allies, countries like canada or germany or france. they have greater mobility than we do. not less. the idea that so many children are born into poverty in the wealthiest nation on earth is heartbreaking enough, but the idea that a child may never be able to escape that poverty because she lacks a decent education or health care or a community at that views her future as their own, that should offend all of us. and it should compel us to action. we are a better country than this. so let me repeat. the combined trends of increased inequality and decreasing mobility pose a fundamental threat to the american dream, our way of life
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and what we stand for around the globe. and it is not simply a moral claim that i'm making here. there are practical consequences to rising inequality and reduced mobility. for one thing, these trends are bad for our economy. one study finds that growth is more fragile and recessions are more frequent in countries with greater inequality. and that makes sense. when families have less to spend, that means businesses have fewer customers. and households rack up greater mortgage and credit card debt. meanwhile, concentrated wealth at the top is less likely to result in the kind of broadly based consumer spending that drives our economy and together with laxed regulation can contribute to speculative bubbles. and declining mobility are also bad for our families and social cohesion. not just because we tend to
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trust our institutions less but studies show we actually tend to trust each other less when this is' greater inequality. and greater inequality is associated with less mobility between generations. that means it's not just temporary. the effects last. it creates a vicious cycle. for example, by the time she turns 3 years old, a child born hears 30 -income home million fewer words than a child from a well-off family which means by the time she starts school she's already behind. and that deficit can compound tself over time. and finally, rising inequality and declining mobility are bad for our democracy. ordinary folks can't write massive campaign checks or hire high-priced lobbyists that tilt
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the playing field in everyone's exspence so people get the -- expense so people gets the bad taste that the system is rigged and that increasing polarization and it decreases the political participation that is a requisite part of our system of self-government. so this is an issue that we have to tackle head on. and if in fact the majority of americans agree that our number one priority is to restore opportunity and broad-based growth for all americans, the question is, why has washington onsistently failed to act? i think a big reason is the myths developed around the issue of inequality. first, there's a myth that's restricted to a small share of
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predominantly minority poor. this isn't a broad-based problem but a black problem or hispanic problem or native american problem. that's true that the painful legacy of discrimination means that african-americans, latinos, native americans are far more likely to suffer from a lack of opportunity. higher unemployment, higher poverty rates. it's also true that women still make 77 cents on the dollar compared to men. so we're going to need strong application of anti-discrimination. we're going to need immigration reform that grows the economy and takes people out of the shadows. we're going to need targeted initiatives to close those gaps. [applause] but here's an important point. the decades' long shift in the
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economy have hurt all groups, poor and middle class, inner city and rural folks, men and women. and americans of all races. and as a consequence, some of the social patterns that contribute to declining mobility that were once attributed to the urban poor -- that's a particular problem for the inner city. single parent households or drug abuse or -- it turns out now we're seeing that pop up everywhere. a new study shows that disparities in education, mental health, obesity, absent fathers, isolation from church, isolation from community groups, these gaps are now as much about growing up rich or poor as they are about anything else.
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the gap in test scores between poor kids and wealthy kids is now nearly twice what it is between white kids and black kids. kids with working class parents are 10 times likelier than are more likely to -- the fact is this, the opportunity gap in america is now as much about class as it is about race and that gap is growing. so if we're going to take on growing inequality and try to improve upward mobility for all people, we've got to move beyond the false notion that this is an issue exclusively of minority concern. and we have to reject a politics that suggests any effort to address it in a meaningful way somehow pits the interest of a deserving middle class against those of an undeserving poor in search of handouts. [applause]
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second, we need to dispel the myth that the goals of growing the economy and reducing inequality are necessarily in conflict when they should actually work in concert. we know from our history that our economy grows best from the middle out, when growth is more widely shared. and we know that beyond a certain level of inequality, growth actually slows altogether. third, we need to set aside the belief that government cannot do anything about reducing inequality. it's true that government cannot prevent all the downsize of the technological change and global competition that are out there right now, and some of those forces are also some of the things that are helping us grow. and it's also true that some
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programs in the past, like welfare before it was reformed, were sometimes poorly designed, created disincentives to work, but we've also seen how government action time and again can make an enormous action and increasing opportunity and bolesering action into the middle -- bowlesering action into the middle class. laws establishing collective bargaining and the minimum wage, these all contributed to standards of living for a massive number of americans. likewise, when previous generations declared that every citizen of this country deserved a basic measure of security, the floor through which they could not fall, we helped millions of americans live in dignity. and gave millions more the confidence to aspire to something better by taking a isk on a great idea. without social security, nearly half of seniors would be living in poverty.
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half. today fewer than one in 10 do. before medicare, only half of all seniors had some form of health insurance. today virtually all do. and because we've strengthened that safety net and expanded pro-work and pro-family tax credits like the earned income tax credit, a recent study found that the poverty rate has fallen below 30% since the 1960's. and that's endeavors didn't just make us a better country, they reaffirmed that we are a great country. so we can make a difference on this. in fact, that's our generation's task, to rebuild america's economic and civic foundation to continue the expansion of an opportunity for this generation and the next generation. and like -- [applause]
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and i take this personally. i'm only here because this country educated my grandfather on the g.i. bill. when my father left and my mom hit hard times trying to raise my sister and me, this country made sure we didn't go hungry. when michelle, the daughter of a ship worker at a water plant and a secretary wanted to go to college, just like me, this country helped us afford it until we could pay it back. so it drives me as a grandson, a son, a father, as an american is to make sure that every striving, hardworking, optimistic kid in america has the same incredible chance that this country gave me. [applause]
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it has been the driving force between everything we've done these past five years. and over the course of the next year and for the rest of my presidency, that's where you should expect us to focus all of our efforts. [applause] now, you'll be pleased to know this is not a state of the union address. [laughter] and many of the ideas that can make the biggest difference in expanding opportunity i presented before. but let me offer a few key principles, just a road map that i believe should guide us in both our legislative agenda and our administrative efforts. to begin with, we have to continue to relentlessly push a growth agenda. it may be true that in today's economy, growth alone does not guarantee higher wages and incomes. we've seen that. but what's also true is we
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can't tackle inequality if the economic pie is shrinking or stagnant. the fact is if you're a progressive and you want to help the middle class and the working poor, you still got to be concerned about competitiveness and productivity and business confidence that spurs private sector investment. and that's why from day one we worked to get the economy growing and help our businesses hire. and thanks to their resilience and innovation, they created nearly eight million new jobs over the past 44 months. now we got to grow the economy even faster and we got to keep working to make america a mag nant for good middle -- mag nent for good middle class jobs for those that we lost, jobs in manufacturing, energy, infrastructure and technology. that means simplifying our corporate tax code in a way that closes wasteful loopholes nd ends incentives that ship jobs overseas. [applause] we can by broadening the base,
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we can lower rates to encourage more companies to hire here and use some of the money we saved to create good jobs rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our airports and all the infrastructure our businesses need. it means a trade agenda that grows exports and works for the middle class. it means streamlining regulations that are outdated or unnecessary or too costly. and it means coming together around a responsible budget, one that fwrose our economy faster right now -- grows our economy faster right now and shrinks our long-term deficits, one that unwinds the harmful sequester cuts that haven't made a lot of sense. [applause] frees up eeze up -- scientific research that's always unleashed new innovation in industries. when it comes to our budget, we should not be stuck in a stale debate from two years ago or three years ago. a relentlessly growing deficit
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of opportunity is a bigger threat to our future than our rapidly shrinking fiscal deficit. [applause] so that's step one towards restoring mobility. making sure our economy is growing faster. step two is making sure we empower more americans with the skills and education they need to compete in a highly competitive global economy. we know that education is the most important predictor of income today. so we launched a race to the top in our schools. we're supporting states that have raised standards for teaching and learning. we're pushing for redesigned high schools that graduate more kids with the technical training and apprenticeship and in-demand high tech skills that can lead to a good job and middle class life. we know it's harder -- >> you can continue to watch the president's comments live
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on c-span.org. here on c-span, we will break away and take you live to the u.s. house. they're gaveling in for legislative work. this afternoon. and several votes expected throughout the afternoon. they're taking up a bill that would exempt most private equity firms from registering with the securities and exchange commission. we expect to hear from speaker boehner right at the top talking about some of the republican accomplishments during the 113th congress. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2013] in order. the chair will be offered by our chaplain, father conroy. father conroy: eternal god, once again we come to you to ask wisdom, patience, peace and understanding for the members of this people's house. give them the generosity of heart and the courage of true leadership, to work toward a common solution to the many issues facing our nation.
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may they find the fortitude to make judgments to benefit all americans in their team of need. may all that is done this day be for your greater honor and glory, amen. the speaker: the chair has examined the journal of the last day's proceedings and announces to the house his approval thereof. pursuant to clause 1 of rule 1, the journal stands approved. of pledge of allegiance today will be led by jeafment kansas, mrs. jenkins. mrs. jenkins: the pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america and to the republican for -- and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under god, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. the speaker: the chair will entertain up to 15 requests for one minute d speeches on each side of the aisle. furpjafment south carolina rise? mr. wilson: meek, i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute,
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revise and extend my remarks. the president has broken multiple promises to the american people. constituents living in south carolina's second congressional district have lost their coverage and access to doctors because of the president's health care takeover which destroys jobs. and now citizens are seeing massive premium increases. james from lexington says, quote, my son got a letter from his employer informing him that his health insurance would increase $179 per month. 52% more than is he presently paying. he's a plumber and his wife works as a home health aide. now their dream of homeownership is highly unlikely. end of quote. mary was tireless, promoting limited government and advocating alternatives to obamacare. congress should work together to replace it with reforms, such as introduced by congressman tom price, which has been ignored by the media, which is failing to fulfill his first amendment opportunities. in conclusion, god bless our troops and we will never forget
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september 11 and the global war on terrorism. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. for what purpose does the gentleman from new york seek recognition? the gentleman from new york is recognized for one minute. mr. higgins: mr. speaker, last month the president and c.e.o. of fedex freight spoke to the transportation league. he warned that our nation's roads, highways and bridges weren't equipped to handle future needs. the american society of civil engineers reports there are 69,000 structurally deficient bridges in this country, meaning that every second of every day seven cars drive on a bridge that is structurally deficient. and $3.6 trillion will be needed by 2020 to address our aging infrastructure. despite this, the most recent transportation bill passed by congress spends a pathetically weak $52 billion a year on infrastructure. companies like fedex understand the long-term benefits of efficient transportation of
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people and goods. the u.s. chamber of commerce estimates that we will experience $336 billion in lost growth over the next five years due to inadequate infrastructure. i urge my colleagues to understand the robust infrastructure investment not only creates jobs but promotes pro-business policies that sustain and produce economic growth. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from ohio, the speaker, seek recognition? the speaker: mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. the speaker: mr. speaker, the american people work hard and they've got a right to expect their elected representatives to do the same. house republicans are listening. to date the house has passed nearly 150 bills this congress that the united states senate has failed to act on. many of them would help our economy and boost job creation. nearly 150 bills passed by this house yet to be acted on by the senate. these bills would do things like increase the supply of
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american energy and build the keystone pipeline, roll back red tape and unnecessary regulations, provide more flexibility to working families, reform and improve job trake programs, protect -- training programs, protect americans from cyberattacks, help schools recruit and keep the best teachers, allow the american people to keep the health care plans that they'd like or to scrap the health care law that's wreaking havoc on our economy. every single one of these bills have been blocked by washington democrats. the senate, the president continue to stand in the way of the people's priorities. now we're trying to come to an agreement on the budget and on the farm bill. amongst other issues that are in conference. chairman ryan and chairman lucas have made serious good-faith efforts to senate democrats. when will they learn to say yes to common ground? when will they start listening to the american people? i yield back.
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the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from rhode island seek recognition? mr. cicilline: mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from rhode island is recognized for one minute. mr. cicilline: mr. speaker, i rise today to recognize the 250th anniversary of the synagogue in new port, rhode island, the oldest synagogue. dedicated in 1763, it has been a monument to the history of religious tolerance in rhode island. before construction even began, the design of the building was conceived as a balance between european architecture and tradition alk jewish worship. this became the symbol of the freedom to worship in peace in the 17th century and championed by roger wells. in 1790 in a letter reassuring the hebrew congregation, george washington famously declared the values of our nation at its stark pledging that the united states would, quote, give to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance. this weekend it was my honor to attend the rededication of the
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synagogue which mains a testament of the enduring freedoms of our nation and the tradition of religious freedom that began in my home state and is now deeply embedded in the american experience. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlelady from kansas seek recognition? ms. jenkins: to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from kansas is recognized for one minute. ms. jenkins: on november 20 during critical negotiations in geneva about tehran's nuclear program, iran's supreme leader tweeted this disturbing statement. israel is the sinister, unclean, rabid dog of the region. that same day he added, the united states and israel are a threat to the world and enemies that should be resisted. this is an iranian regime we are dealing with. they have ignored diplomatic efforts for years and they cannot be trusted. an interim deal might seem like
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good news, but it does not make our nation or our allies in the middle east safer, especially when iran claims the agreement is a victory over the great aggressor, the west. this rhetoric leaves me skeptical that any progress has been made, and i encourage our leader and international partners to take the necessary measures to halt iran's nuclear program, not only for our own security but of that of our allies and democracies around the entire world. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: jabe. for what purpose does the gentlelady from illinois seek recognize -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back her time. for what purpose does the gentleman from illinois seek recognition? >> to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is recognized for one minute. ms. kelly: on sunday we celebrated rosa parks day. thursday, we observed the start of the montgomery bus boycott. and friday we commemorate the 148th anniversary of the 13th amendment which ended slavery. as we reflect on these historic
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events, we see how far our nation has come in advancing equality for all americans. however, recent actions, like the supreme court's gutting the vote rights act, we have much more work to do. the truth is that voter discrimination and suppression live on today as ugly legacies of our past. in the past few years, many states have introduced legislation that would restrict access to a voting booth. these discriminatory actions prove that the protections in the voting rights act are still necessary its in our world today. so this week, as we remember the struggles and sacrifices made to ensure basic rights for all americans, i urge my colleagues to continue fighting to ensure no american is denied their right to vote. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlewoman yields back the balance of her time. for what purpose does the gentleman from colorado seek recognition? >> i ask unanimous consent to
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address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado is recognized for one minute. >> mr. speaker, the proposed endangered species act for the greater sage grass will impact millions of acres in colorado and hinder existing conservation efforts. it will put private lands off-limits to most use and development, including agricultural production without providing any compensation. mr. tipton: it will kill jobs, devastate communities and disrupt species preservation efforts currently under way. it won't preserve the grass. in my district, plans at the local level are under way to effectively preserve the supposies. because they take into account the unique geography and area of the region. these efforts are seeing success. interior department bureaucrats have yet to provide measurable species preservation goals so local officials can meet them. they are disrupted by federal attempts to have blanket
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plants. these one-size-fits-all plans tie up resources that could be used for preservation. if the true goal is species preservation, i hope the secretary will see the work being done to preserve the sage grass and provide measurable species preservation goals. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado yields back his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from north carolina seek recognition? >> perm -- permission to dress and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized. >> thank you, mr. speaker. chapel hill tended and duke university. he's now a vice chair for veterans affairs at duke and he's dedicated himself wholly to our veterans and serving them our great state of north carolina. co-author the rational clinical
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examine is a guide for patient exams and has become a powerful reference for those in the field of medicine. his commitment to his family, his students, his patients and to his veterans make him an exemplary citizen. mr. mcintyre: he'll continue to benefit our veterans and north arolinians in years to come. we thank him for his intelligence, compassion and selfless dedication. we pray that he and his family will receive god's richest blessings and we're thankful for role models like he serves in serving those who served our country. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from minnesota seek recognition? >> i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from minnesota is recognized for one minute. mr. kline: thank you, mr. speaker. i recognize farmington's commitment in the community's five-year anniversary as
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minnesota's first yellow ribbon city. when i first championed legislation to make the minnesota national guard's invaluable yellow ribbon reintegration program available nationwide, one of the pillars of this was to increase awareness among local organizations to improve relationships between veterans and their communities. mr. speaker, the people of farmington understand the mportant role of community playing a role in our troops returning home. centered around relationships with neighbors, veterans organizations and local, state and federal leaders, farmington rallied by hosting monthly dinners for veterans and holiday cookie walks. you can't beat that. as their yellow ribbon organization grew and their efforts expanded, they recognized success and shared their best practices for other inspired communities, leaving their yellow ribbon fingerprint across the great state of minnesota. mr. speaker, i rise today not simply to recognize farmington
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on this five-year anniversary but to thank the entire community for being the yellow ribbon trailblazer and their continued dedication. as they honor our sons and daughters in uniform, i'd like to honor them and i salute the entire community of farmington, minnesota, for helping with that noble cause. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. for what purpose does the gentlelady from texas seek recognition? ms. jackson lee: to address the house for one minute and to ask unanimous consent. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from texas is recognized for one minute. ms. jackson lee: during this holiday season, it appears that all that our fellow americans are hearing is a sense of pessimism. i want to rise to talk about the optimism of this nation and the great strides that we have made and particularly as it relates to our seniors. the affordable care act has taken the brunt of everybody's
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criticism. my friends on the other side of the aisle are singing a broken record, not a christmas carol, but it is important to note that seniors have benefited. the affordable care act recognizes the financial burdens that seniors face. no group has been hit harder by soaring health care costs, but now under the affordable care act, seniors can have preventive care services without any co-pay, co-insurance or deductible, services like wellness visits, cholesterol and others. sing a good song. and yet we sing a negative song to those would are lining the streets for comprehensive immigration reform. the families who've been fasting have been suffering. let's sing a good song of the health care and do comprehensive immigration reform. yield back. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from north carolina seek recognition? >> i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one
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minute, revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> mr. speaker, when the president picks and chooses which laws to enforce, it undermines the foundations of our democracy. yesterday in the house judiciary committee, we held a hearing to examine the president's constitutional responsibility to faithfully execute the law. our founding fathers formed the structure of our government specifically so that none of the three branches could become too powerful. mr. holding: if we ignore our system of checks and balances, our government will become unstable and chaotic. mr. speaker, unfortunately this president and his administration have abused their executive power. president obama continues to violate his constitutional duty to enforce the laws and instead when and which laws to enforce. he has enforced laws and policies based on his preferences like making changes to our immigration system, our criminal code and his signature health care law. mr. speaker, neither the president nor any president should grant themselves
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extraconstitutional authority to change laws they don't like. if the president himself does not follow the law, it sets a dangerous example. mr. speaker, i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlelady from california seek recognition? the gentlelady is recognized for one minute. >> thank you. this holiday season my constituents vin speiered me by writing in -- my constituents have inspired me about writing in about food aid and the snap program. all of us here in congress have the luxury of knowing that we can provide our families with healthy food, but there are so many people in our country that will go this holiday without such a blessing. and sadly most of those in dire need are children. mrs. davis: and in fact 70% of all households that depend on snap are families with children. in my district, a 16-year-old girl named maya was hospitalized last year for issues related to malnutrition. she had struggled in school and
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showed signs of depression. maya's hospitalization triggered her father to apply for snap benefits. and having a more reliable source of food gave maya the energy to improve her grades and help her family. she helps her family out now by getting a part-time job. and as we debate the farm bill, let's remember, let's remember that there are children like maya, and work together to protect snap. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. for what purpose does the gentleman from north carolina seek recognition? >> unanimous consent to address the house for one minute, revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from north carolina is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. i rise today to honor my fastest constituent, jimmie johnson, who recently won his sixth nascar sprint cup championship. in a remarkable display of teamwork, consistency and a burning desire to always improve, jimmie johnson won six nascar championships in the last eight years. more importantly, jimmy is a champion off the track.
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since 2006, the jimmie johnson foundation has contributed more than $5 million to charity with a special focus on improving k-12 education in north carolina, oklahoma and california. mr. pittenger: in charlotte, jimmy is a supporter of -- jimmi sembings a supporter of project -- jimmie is a supporter of project lift, improving the graduation rate in some of charlotte's toughest neighborhoods. thank you, jimmie, for using your ontrack success to make a lasting impact in the lives of thousands of children. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition? >> mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks and address the house. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. takano: mr. speaker, i rise today to speak about the benefits of obamacare. dennis denbow, a 63-year-old constituent of mine, spoke to
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our local newspaper to share his story. mr. denbow, who was laid off recently from his computer sales job, went to the california website and found that he and his wife will save $300 a month on a plan comparable to what they have now. a few weeks ago mr. denbow wrote to my office to tell me personally about his experience and how deeply he believes in america's ability to achieve great things. in his letter he said, we are americans, we can solve whatever issues or tactical challenges that come up in the implementation of a nationwide health care solution. we can make it efficient, cost-effective, accessible and a valuable service for all americans. i couldn't agree more, mr. denbow. the benefits of obamacare are real and this body should be concerned with finding ways to improve access to affordable health care instead of delaying and defunding. thank you and i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the
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gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from michigan seek recognition? >> i rise to address the house for one minute, to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: does the gentleman ask for unanimous consent to address the house? >> i do. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. i rise today to congratulate zealen west high school's football team on winning the 2013 division iii state championship on saturday, november 30, at ford field in detroit. the zealen ducks rushed for over 440 yards during the game, resulting in a 34-27 win over dewhich the. the ducks' 13-1 record this season is a testament to the players' dedication, hard work and self-sacrifice. in fact, the program itself has become an example of hard work and leadership. this is the ducks' third state title since the program's inception only nine years ago. mr. huizenga: mr. speaker, i'd be remiss if i didn't also congratulate the ducks' head coach, john shalito, and his
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coaching staff for a job well done, not only on the field but off the field with his players as he leads them. again, congratulations to the ducks and we're very pleased to see this big win last saturday. and with that i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlelady from california seek recognition? does the gentlelady seek unanimous consent? the gentlelady is recognized for one minute. >> mr. speaker, i rise to highlight the positive impact the affordable care act is having in my home state of california. a woman by the name of melanie wrote the following letter to the "l.a. times." my daughter and i have been without health care for three years, following my loss of employer-provided insurance. in that period, i have paid handsomely for those times when my things were not sufficient and i had to seek the care of a very expensive doctor. ms. roybal-allard: i've been waiting eagerly for obamacare for the two of us since the law was enacted in 2010.
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did i run into problems when i first tried to sign up in california? i did. did i persevere? i did. did i finally get through? i did. in january i'll be able to take care of a condition i've ignored for the last two years and my college-aged daughter will be covered as well. although the subsidies certainly help, i will be paying something for coverage we haven't had for years. to those who cry foul, i say, score. mr. speaker, i couldn't have said it better. the reality is that because of obamacare millions of vulnerable americans now score. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back the balance of her time. the gentleman from oklahoma seeks recognition, for what purpose? >> unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> mr. speaker, last week we celebrated thanksgiving. we gathered with family and friends to thank god for his provision, his goodness and his mercy.
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but for some families this thanksgiving was bittersweet. such was the case for senator inhofe's family. they lost their son parry in a tragic aviation accident on november 10. mr. parry inhofe, i should say dr. parry inhofe, was a highly skilled surgeon associated with central state's orthopedics in tulsa, oklahoma. david long, central state c.e.o., said that dr. inhofe was known as a very caring and compassionate physician. he was the kind of doctor who would make you feel you had his full attention and that your health was the most important thing to him. continuing an inhofe family that dirks parry loved flying with his children and teaching them about flying. mr. bridenstine: from what i understand he was a good pilot. dr. inhofe is survived by his wife, nancy, and two sons, glade and cole. i wish to express condolences to the whole inhofe family. i pray they will be comforted and strengthened by the fact that parry was a believer in the living christ. who said, i am the resurrection and the life. whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live.
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amen. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for at purpose does -- what purpose does the gentleman from connecticut seek recognition? >> seek unanimous consent to address the house for one minute, revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. himes: mr. speaker, now that the notorious problems with the a.c.a. website, healthcare.gov, appear to be largely behind us, it's important that we cut through the partisan noise and lack at some facts. one fact is that in two days, sunday and monday alone, almost 30,000 americans have gone to healthcare.gov to sign up for health insurance. many of these families are families with pre-existing conditions that would have no way to get health insurance other than healthcare.gov and the a.c.a. in my own safety connecticut, with less than 1% of the american population, 22,000 families have signed up for health insurance. mr. speaker, from the president
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on down, we were concerned by people losing their health care plans in the rather small individual market. but it is important for the american people to understand that when they hear the word repeal, what they need to understand is that repeal means that the tens of thousands, the hundreds of thousands, the millions of americans who will get insurance because of the a.c.a. will lose it. millions of americans will lose their newfound insurance if this word repeal ever becomes law. that is not right and on that i think we should agree. and i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentleman from tennessee seek recognition? >> unanimous consent to address the house for one minute, revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from tennessee is recognized for one minute. >> mr. speaker, it is with great pride that i rise today to honor corporal matthew hampton, an outstanding citizen of our community and a true american patriot. in recognition of his service to this country, matthew was recently awarded the 28th palmer veteran appreciation
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award. following his graduation from grundy county high school, matthew volunteered for the united states marine corps and was deployed to iraq where he served as a helicopter crew chief and gunner. corporal hampton's exemp lara service as a devil dog is reflected in the commendations and decorations he received. mr. desantis: including the combat -- mr. desjarlais: including the combat medal. this recognition is a testament to the heroism and dedication to duty that marked his service in the united states marine corps. i along with a grateful nation congratulate him on receiving the palmer veteran award and thank him for his outstanding service to our nation. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlelady from florida seek recognition? ms. wasserman schultz: i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute, revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from florida is recognized. ms. wasserman schultz: thank you, mr. speaker. i rise to highlight how the affordable care act is already
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helping thousands of breast cancer survivors and those with pre-existing conditions. in late 2007 i heard those terrible words, you have breast cancer. i underwent seven surgeries. but in some ways i was one of the fortunate ones because i had health insurance coverage. i've spoken to women who have foregone mammograms and even cancer treatment because the cost was simply too great to bare. now the affordable care act emphasizes prevention by making it possible for americans to get screenings like mammograms without a co-pay. it also finally end -- ends the egregious practice of denying coverage to patients with pre-existing conditions like high constituent, caroline, a survivor who will save $7,000 a year with an affordable plan thanks to the affordable care act she could save even more by shopping on the exchange. with the affordable care act making it possible for more women to access preventive services and not be denied coverage, we can work to eraid kate breast cancer once and for all -- eradicate breast cancer once and for all. thank you, i yield back the
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balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back the balance of her time. for what purpose does the gentleman from florida seek recognition? colorado. i apologize. >> the gentleman from colorado requests unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. perlmutter: thank you, mr. speaker. today i rise to tell a story of the montes family who live in my congressional district in colorado. they live in arvada, colorado, and because of the affordable care act, they will now be able to afford health insurance. this is a success story of the affordable care act in improving access to quality, aforbled health care. -- affordable health care. oth what you queen and rosalie mondays at the are employed. they have a daughter in college, a 13-year-old son and a 4-year-old daughter. with rates ranging from $450 to $600 per month, purchasing private insurance was too expensive for the montes
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family, especially with three kids, a house payment and a car payment. due to a constrained budget, the only time the kids were receiving health care was when they were, quote, really, really, really sick, and always at an urgent care center. one time after their daughter got e. coli, the montes family was stuck with a $17,000 hospital bill. thanks to the help of a navigator, they were able to get insurance through the affordable care act, which is a success for this nation and with that i yield back, mr. speaker. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado yields back. for what purpose does the gentlelady from hawaii seek recognition? the gentlelady from hawaii is recognized for one minute. ms. hanabusa: thank you, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, december 13 is nine days away. this is part of that agreement when the c.r. was agreed to and the debt ceiling suspended.
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the budget is the statement of the house and senate's values and priorities, and what has been agreed to by december 13. one of the things we must say, mr. speaker, at the very minimum is sequestration has to go. the c.b.o. says it will cost up to 1.6 million jobs if it's alound to stand. conversely, it -- allowed to stand. conversely, it will add 900,000 new jobs if it is gotten rid of. what sequestration has done is affected programs like head start, snap, programs at the national institutes of health, mental health issues, just to name a few, as well as our defense industry. there's no longer any room in these budgets to accommodate all of these expenses just to pay what we need to pay to keep these programs going.
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that is why we have to say sequestration has got to go, and that is why the next nine days you'll hear more and more speak about sequestration and the fact that we must act on it. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back her time. for what purpose does the gentleman from virginia seek recognition? mr. moran: to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. moran: the safe climate caucus has brought to the house floor the reality and the ramifications of climate change. there was a recent report from three very reputable think tanks entitled "the arab spring" and "climate change." let me quote from a couple of the troubling and illuminating conclusions. a prolonged and severe drought during the winter of 2010 in china contributed to global
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wheat shortages and skyrocketing bread prices in egypt, the largest wheat importer, and social economic, environmental changes in syria eroded the social contract between citizen and government, strengthening the case for the opposition movement and irreputablely damaging the assad regime. the office concluded that global warming may not have caused the arab spring, but it clearly made it come earlier. the stresses climate change is imposing on nations across the globe has severe consequences in the future. we have to address the reality and ramifications of climate change. thank you, mr. speaker. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. for what purpose does the gentlelady from california, the minority leader, seek recognition? ms. pelosi: mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute and to
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revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is recognized. ms. pelosi: mr. speaker, today the president has put forth some conversation about the affordable care act that focuses especially on women's health. i'm absolutely delighted to come to the floor to address that issue. because of the affordable care act, and i hope that every woman in america understands this, being a woman is no longer a pre-existing medical condition. as a mother of five children, four daughters and one son, i'm very excited about this. over the break i had the privilege of being at a meeting with some researchers on the subject of breast cancer in particular and they spent a good deal of the time telling us what the possibilities were for -- with research that should be funded and that's a budget issue on another subject but related here that we could remove this threat to women's health with proper research.
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but they took time to say that one thing that was helping women with breast cancer more than anything was the affordable care act. that they would have access to care without having been discriminated against because of a pre-existing medical condition. no longer would they have annual or lifetime limits on the health insurance that they would receive. the least of the stress from all of that is a very healthy thing for people who have a diagnosis. so whether -- whatever it is, whether it's mammograms, as my colleague, congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz so generously shared her story about her experience earlier, congresswoman delauro, hers and other members, the stories of their constituents, this is really very important. moms are the hubs of families. many of them fear this diagnosis. many families in america have been affected by it.
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by the investment in research and the affordable care act, women have every reason to be hopeful that they can be prevented with early detection and not only early detection but regular detection and then on top of that, that if -- if they have that feared diagnosis, they will receive the care that they deserve. one other point i want to make -- because we all worship at the alter of biomedical research and what it means to our country and the thought we could be rid of breast cancer in a handful of years, we want to make sure that every woman in america and every person in america benefits from that research. the vehicle for that is the affordable care act. it stands right there with social security, with medicare, with affordable -- and that's the word -- affordable health care for all americans as a pillar of health and economic security for the american
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people. today we focus on moms. we focus on women and say thank god no longer being a woman be a pre-existing medical condition. with that, mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back the balance of her time. for what purpose does the gentleman from florida seek recognition? mr. new jersey ept: mr. speaker by the nt: mr. speaker, direction of the committee on rules, i call up house resolution 429 and ask for its immediate consideration. the speaker pro tempore: the clerk will report the resolution. the clerk: house -- resolved, that at any time after adoption of this resolution the speaker may, pursuant to clause 2-b of rule 18, declare the house resolved into the committee of the whole house on the state of the union for consideration of the bill h.r. 3309, to amend title 35, united states code, and the leahy-smith america invents act to make improvements and technical corrections, and for other purposes. the first reading of the bill shall be dispensed with.
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all points of order against consideration of the bill are waived. general debate shall be confined to the bill and shall not exceed one hour equally divided and controlled by the chair and ranking minority member of the committee on the judiciary. after general debate the bill shall be considered for amendment under the five-minute rule. in lieu of the amendment in the nature of a substitute recommended by the committee on the judiciary now printed in the bill, it shall be in order to consider as an original bill for the purpose of amendment under the five-minute rule an amendment in the nature of a substitute consisting of the text of rules committee print 113-28. that amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be considered as read. all points of order against that amendment in the nature of a substitute are waived. no amendment to that amendment in the nature of a substitute shall be in order except those printed in part a of the report of the committee on rules accompanying this resolution. each such amendment may be
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offered only in the order printed in the report, may be offered only by a member designated in the report, shall be considered as read, shall be debatable for the time specified in the report equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an opponent, shall not be subject to amendment, and shall not be subject to a demand for division of the question in the house or in the committee of the whole. all points of order against such amendments are waived. at the conclusion of consideration of the bill for amendment the committee shall rise and report the bill to the house with such amendments as may have been adopted. any member may demand a separate vote in the house on any amendment adopted in the committee of the whole to the bill or to the amendment in the nature of a substitute made in order as original text. the previous question shall be considered as ordered on the bill and amendments thereto to final passage without intervening motion except one motion to recommit with or without instructions. section 2.
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upon adoption of this resolution it shall be in order to consider in the house the bill h.r. 1105, to amend the investment advisers act of 1940 to provide a registration exemption for private equity fund advisers, and for other purposes. all points of order against consideration of the bill are waived. an amendment in the nature of a substitute consisting of the text of rules committee print 113-29 shall be considered as adopted. the bill, as amended, shall be considered as read. all points of order against provisions in the bill, as amended, are waived. the previous question shall be considered as ordered on the bill, as amended, and on any further amendment thereto, to final passage without intervening motion except, one, one hour of debate equally divided and controlled by the chair and ranking minority member of the committee on financial services. two, the further amendment
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printed in part b of the report of the committee on rules accompanying this resolution, if offered by representative carolyn maloney of new york or her designee, which shall be in order without intervention of any point of order, shall be considered as read, shall be separately debatable for 10 minutes equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an opponent, and shall not be subject to a demand for division of the question. and, three, one motion to recommit with or without nstructions. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from florida is recognized for one hour. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, for the purposes of debate only, i yield the customary 30 minutes to the gentleman from colorado, mr. polis. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. nugent: pending which time, i yield myself such time as i may consume. during consideration of this resolution, all time yielded is for the purposes of debate only. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for as much time as he wishes to consume. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, i ask
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unanimous consent that all members may have five legislative days to revise and extend their remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, i rise today in support of this rule, house resolution 429. house resolution 429 provides the structured rule for both h.r. 3309, the innovation act, and h.r. 1105, the small business capital access and job preservation act. the rule gives the house the opportunity to debate a variety of important amendments offered by members on both sides of the aisle. the innovation act seeks to address a growing problem of abusive patent litigation, commonly known as patent trolling. patent trolls are a nonpracticing entity. in other words, they don't make or sell product and they don't supply services. instead, they exist to secure fees from businesses that use technologies covered by the patents they own. they do this by acquiring weak
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patents and then patent intrainingment lawsuits or sending blanket demand letters to businesses. victims of these frivolous lawsuits are all too often small businesses or startups or ill equipped to protect themselves. they simply don't have the resources available to mount an adequate defense. it is by definition a lose-lose scenario for them. defendants pay millions in damages if they lose, and millions in legal fees if they win. more often, defendants are forced to settle despite the merits of a case in order to avoid expensive legal costs. meanwhile, patent trolls are aided by law firms that operate on contingency fees. this means a nonpracticing entity lose their case, there's no monetary consequence to them, none at all. they are not on the hook for legal fees like their counterparts are. as you can see for small companies, this system is inherently unfair.
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our small businesses are our most important innovators in this country. they're largely responsible for new products and services we as consumers enjoy. they are also a critical factor in growing our economy and creating jobs. we should provide fairness to them by leveling the playing field in patent litigation process. we ought to ensure that our patent system isn't stifling innovation but encouraging it. unfortunately, this just isn't the case right now. patent trolling is a destructive practice that zaps resources from small businesses and increases costs for consumers and it is a negative impact isn't just limited to the tech sector either. patent trolling affects businesses and industries of all the like. even grossers. it's a drag on our economy.
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this not only deserves to be debated by the house, this rule will ensure that a deliberative process takes place. the rule also allows for consideration of h.r. 1105, the small business capital access and job preservation act. this legislation would remove the requirement that small private equity firms register with the securities and exchange commission, the s.e.c. however, it would retain the option of registering if they so choose to. under current law, small private equity firms are being grouped with behemoths despite the fact they played no role and contributing role in the financial crisis we went through. even the chairman of the s.e.c. admitted that the private equity funds were not an underlying cause of the recent inancial crisis. private equity does not pose a systemic risk to the economy so why are we taking limited resources at the s.e.c. away from their mission, and
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shifting them to overseas firms that pose no systemic risk at all? why are we burdening these small companies with s.e.c. registration, cost, according to the private equity growth council, can exceed over $1 million per year. more money in unnecessary compliance costs means less money to invest in companies, particularly newer ones, which allow them to grow and create the jobs we desperately -- desperately need. in my home state of florida, there are over 1,000 private equity-backed companies alone. there's over 100 private equity firms within the state of florida. these companies support more than 800,000 workers throughout the country. in fact, in 2012, florida ranked fifth in the nation in attracting private equity investments. that investment is a vital tool for growing companies and we
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are needlessly handcuffing their ability to do just that. h.r. 1105 will help these smaller funds increase the capital available for real companies so their businesses can thriving. make no mistake, this -- thrive. make no mistake, thanks jobs bill, and it will help -- this is a jobs bill and it will help grow our economy. i support this rule that would allow us to consider these bills and i hope that my colleagues on both sides of the aisle will do the same. with that i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from florida reserves. the gentleman from colorado is recognized. mr. polis: thank you, mr. chair. there's many things that my good friend from florida said that i agree with and i will be discussing some of the merits of these bills. but it is worthwhile to bring forward, before discussing what these bills are, what these bills are not. it has been 159 days and 14 hours since the senate passed comprehensive immigration reform. this body's failure to act on immigration reform has already
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cost our economy nearly $6 billion. each additional day. each day that we delay action costs $37 million in revenue. hundreds of thousands of jobs lost. failure to secure the border. failure to restore the rule of law to our country. countless families torn apart. while the judiciary committee has found the time to move asbestos bills, patent reform bills to the floor with ease, immigration reform remains stagnant. the judiciary committee has reported out four immigration reform bills. the legal work force act, the agriculture guest workers act, the safe act and the skilled visas act it. reported these four bills out prior to the asbestos bill, which was rushed immediately to the floor, prior to the patent bill, which was rushed to the floor after a hearing in rules committee yesterday. my question to the gentleman from florida, and i'll be happy to yield to him for a moment,
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is why we're giving such treatment to asbestos and patent reform when immigration reform would create so many more jobs and reduce our deficit by so much more? i'd like to know if the gentleman from florida has an answer to that question. i yield to the gentleman. mr. nugent: i thank the gentleman from colorado but i will tell you this. that the house is moving through the judiciary committee at a pace to make sure that we do this right in regards to immigration. where the senate has rushed through a bill that is so comprehensive and so large, it will be similar to obamacare. mr. polis: reclaiming my time. reclaiming my time. 68 members of the senate, including many republicans, including former presidential republican nominee john mccain, supported the senate immigration reform bill. i certainly understand the desire to get it right. but bills don't get right by themselves. these are four bills that have passed the judiciary committee. we in rules like to make them right by allowing good, thoughtful amendments from
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colleagues on both sides of the aisle. i hope that next week or when we're back we'll be able to move forward the immigration bills with the same that we've moved forward asbestos and patent reform. mr. nugent: i hope the same thing happens. that as these bills move through jish sear, that we do -- judiciary, that we do see them in rules committee and that they ultimately couple to this floor for debate. mr. polis: reclaiming my time. i thank the gentleman from florida. mr. speaker, i do support underlying bills that are contained under this rule. i support h.r. 1105, the bipartisan small business capital access and job preservation act. it exempts private equity funds, which are very lightly leveraged, invest in helping to grow companies and jobs from costly and unnecessary s.e.c. registration and reporting requirements. like venture capital firms that are already exempted and substantially have very similar business models to private equity firms. these registration requirements
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are an impediment to business and an impediment to job growth. and have nothing to do with creating systemic risk in our economy. importantly, this bill would only exempt private equity firms with low debt to equity ratios, leveraged at ratio of less than 2-1. once you get talking about much higher debt to debt equity ratios, there's potentially systemic risk if you're talking about funds in the multibillions of dollars that are highly leveraged. it's hard to see how that could happen it. had nothing to do with the financial meltdown of exate-2009. new this case we're being extremely safe in saying, if they're leveraged 2-1, they are no systemic risk to the economy. my state and my district know first hnled the benefits that private equity provides to employees, to companies, to investors, including pensions, in our economy. there's nearly 500 private equity-backed companies headquartered in colorado. many more that operate with employees, more than 124,000 workers in colorado facilities. in 2012 there were 67 private equity investments in colorado,
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totaling over $26 billion that was brought to our state. because of this investment mechanism. placing colorado third in the state's receive -- in the states receiving the most private equity investment. the underlying rule also makes in order the innovation act which i also supported in 2011. patent assertion entities, some of whom were bad actors which are sometimes referred to as patent trols, who often produce little or normal and -- nothing and derive their revenue from litigation and licensing, cost significant overhang to other businesses. and to consumers for whom many of these costs are passed along in the products or services that we all injoy. the majority of the targets of patent trolls were startups, hospitals, restaurants, retailers, hotels and other job engines in our economy. the jobs made in the america ineventualities act enacted two years ago went a little ways in this regard but did not do much
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to halt or put a stop to or reduce patent troll litigation or improve the quality of pat enlts. in the cafse software patents, growing -- in the case of software patents, growing logs and ambiguities involving standards have led to approval of low-quality software pat enlts that not even -- patents who have not even stood up when brought to litigation. thankfully the moment sum growing to address patent reform and i want to be clear, and i discussed this with chairman good lalt in rules committee yesterday, -- goodlatte in rules committee yesterday, this rule is not patent reform. i believe the gentleman, mr. goodlatte, agrees. this is not patent reform. it may be a few steps in the right direction, it may be a good start, it doesn't fundamentally create intellectual property protection system for the digital era and the 21st century it. continues to put, constructively, band-aids on a 1913 system which i do believe it is high time to rethink. i look forward to an upcoming
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symposium in my district at the university of colorado this friday that we'll be having on sort of blue-skying intellectual property protection mechanisms for the 21st century and the digital economy to encourage growth and protect inventors. this bill does not do that. however, it is a step forward in many regards. and while i strongly support many of these patent system improvements, it won't fix our patent system. patent trolls have targeted every form of business and it should come as no surprise that the innovation act enjoys support from members from both sides of the aisle. from companies, from academics, i submitted a letter into the record yesterday from 67 professors at law universities who practice in i.p. from a broad, ideological perspective, into the record in our rules committee yesterday, expressing their support for this bill. and this bill maintains protections for inventors' rights, to enforce their -- to enforce their patent claims. specifically this bill allocates the burden of palletent litigation more
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fairly it. includes a provision of -- and restores financial stability to the patent system by making it easier for courts to impose sanctions -- sanctions on anyone who brings a frivolous patent suit it. also requires a disclosure of critical details such as what patents and claims are even infringed, so the person or entity receiving the letter can even know what is being discussed. so defendants don't need to guess the nature of the allegations against them. the underlying legislation further requests patent holders to disclose additional information to the p.t.o., the court and the accused infringer, including the patent ownership, who owns the patent, and parties with financial interests in the patent. these provisions will help stop patent trolls who engage in illegitimate, litigation campaigns and extortion against startups and small businesses. while i strongly support these patent reforms that are a modest step toward improving our patent system, the litigation reforms alone don't have enough to benefit startups and small companies that are
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targeted by patent trolls who send prelitigation demand letters. i'm very appreciative of the chairman's effort to allow and the rules committee's efforts to allow for my amendment, along with mr. chaffetz, mr. connolly and mr. marino, who have been working in this regard to see stronger language on the issue of prelitigation demand letters and i'm grateful at we've made in order the demand process. we've been discussing that amendment in a more thorough basis shortly. but in brief, the problem is that before a patent troll even files a suit, it typically send as demand letter or many demand letters demanding some form of payment. under current law, the sender does not even have to disclose even the most basic information. as such, enltities often hide behind numerous shell corporations or send vegas or overbroad letters that don't even identify the owner of the patent or the basis of their legal claim.
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essentially leading particularly these small companies to have to hire lawyers or attorneys at great expense. when you have a company that's a $300,000 a year company, a $500,000 a year company and you receive one or more of these notices, you can imagine how that takes away from your growth, your margins, your ability to hire more people. if you have to retain professional counsel to even understand what is being alleged that your company did. importantly the underlying bill requires patent holders seeking to bring willful infringement claims to provide their targets with a minimum level of disclosure information, and the amendment enhances that and builds upon the language and would mandate the demand letters include information identifying the parent entity of the claimant. this language will help ensure that patent trolls can no longer hide under shell companies to conceal their true identity and legitimacy from the letter resilient. i look forward to discussing these bills further and i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the
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gentleman from colorado reserves his time. the gentleman from florida. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, first i want to respond to my good friend from colorado. and i appreciate that he appreciates the approach that this house is taking, particularly as it relates to both of the bills that are the underlying aspect of this rule. it is about moving in a deliberative manner to make sure that we get it right. and i thank mr. polis for pointing that out. and with that i yield three minutes to the gentleman from georgia, mr. collins. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from georgia is recognized for three minutes. mr. collins: thank you, mr. chair, and appreciate it and i appreciate the gentleman for yielding. i rise in strong support of the rule and the underlying legislation, particularly h.r. 3309, the innovation act. as a member of the judiciary committee, i have firsthand -- seen firsthand the diligent and deliberative effort put forth by chairman goodlatte and the rest of the committee to bring forth to this body a pro-business, pro-growth, pro-liberty bill to reform our patent laws. and as my friend from colorado
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stated, there is more that can be done, but this is a very positive step. i agree with him and i appreciate that support. the committee vote speaks for that as well, when it was 33-5 reported out of committee on final pass and. in the time that i have been yielded i'd like to also talk about a misconception that some in the higher education committee have about a fee shifting provision in this bill. the bill language protects plaintiffs who bring a reasonable and good-faith case and who do not engage in litigation miss conduct. in fact, even -- misconduct in fact, the plaintiff is still immune from a field war if his field had a reasonable kay kiss this -- kay sis in both law and fact. i'm a strong supporter of our universities and the incredible research they are don doing and i believe the patent law should protect them. the ability to enforce one's patent in court is essential to preserving vault of the patent and its inherent value to the right of the patent holder. nothing in the innovation act changes this, ensuring fair and
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equity access to our courts isn't done so at expense of universities, but it's a benefit of all patent holders. and would move forward toward general debate in the consideration of amendments made in order by this rule, i urge my colleagues to be very cautious in supporting amendments that would gut or upset the careful balance achieved by this bill. many sanctions -- sections in the h.h. -- h.r. 3309 are intertwined and there are reforms that will help businesses and job creators combat a business model designed solely to benefit from exploitation of our patent system and make no mistake, this isn't just a silicon valley problem. . i hear from hotels and start-ups alike about the impact the vague demand letters and threat of costly frivolous litigation has the ability to do their businesses. end users are often attacked and off threatened with vague demand letters for infringement of an unidentified patent in a product they previously bought in the store. this is why the customer
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protection section 5 of the bill are so important and should not be weakened or eliminated. as a strong conservative i believe our government shouldn't be in the business of picking winners and losers in the marketplace. innovation thrives when government takes a hands off approach, but there are times congress must step in to ensure our laws operate as intended, and this is why we need h.r. 3309. i urge my colleagues to support this rule and underlying bills, and also ask that each carefully consider any amendment that would weaken or compromise the provisions of 3309, particularly section 5. but i will say this before i leave because i have come and spoke on many bills and my dear friend from colorado continues to bring up immigration. i just want to remind the chair and speaker at this point that there was a time two years ago, a few years ago in which there was a golden era in which his party controlled the house, senate, and the presidency. d immigration didn't make --
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and there was choices made and there were plenty of choices you made, even to this day one we are talking about the health care legislation. one of those choice from your point of view sadly was not taken, and that was immigration. today we are dealing with bills we both agree on, but let's not forget the fact when you had a chance you didn't do it. with that i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: members are advised to direct their remarks to the chair and not to individual members. the gentleman from florida reserves. the gentleman from colorado. mr. polis: i certainly wish that we had acted on immigration reform. we did pass in this body under democratic control a dream act, if the gentleman will recall in the waning days of the 111th congress and did take at least one constructive step with an immigration bill we brought to the full floor of this house and passed. i'd like to yield three minutes to my colleague from colorado, a member of the financial services committee, former member of the rules committee, mr. perlmutter. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado is recognized for three minutes. mr. perlmutter: thank you, mr. speaker. first i want to address house bill 3309, the innovation act,
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which is generally a good bill. it's trying to deal with issues of nuisance litigation where somebody is sued and the cost so extreme are that they pay money just to stay away from litigation. that's really the underlying purpose of the bill. now, what we've got to make sure as members of this house and as members of the legislature that we don't advantage one party over another. i see the gentleman from california, mr. roirk, made a good point -- mr. rourke, -- rohrabacher, made a good point at the rules committee, you don't want to disadvantage small inventors who have come up with a good idea or great product, something very novel, and some major corporation takes that idea or that product away and doesn't pay for it. that's the purpose of patent litigation. at the same time you don't want to have some small company that
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buys a wi-fi service all of a sudden getting sued by some company they never heard of and they are saying wait a second, we are not a patent infringer. i say all of this because the purpose is to have good litigation where there isn't extortion and there isn't theft as a result of some patent infringement. what's done in this bill i think, though, is micromanagement of the courtroom and its processes. each of these cases stands and falls on their own merits. and the courts are best equipped to determine their own rules and their own procedures as to how these cases should move forward. i'm generally going to support this. i offered an amendment which was not adopted by the rules committee last night to delay until december of 2015, so the effective -- the effect of section 6 of the bill, so that
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the courts could create their own rules and not have the legislature do it. 100 years ago we passed a rules enabling act which allows the court to set their own procedure, which is then overseen by the legislature. that is sort of discarded in some ll and we create very specific rules, and i think that's a mistake. and i think we could have some real winners and losers, and i think the small guy, small inventor, small purchaser could be in trouble. i would just suggest to the house and to the rules committee that we do look at delaying so that the courts can offer their own procedure. i do want to address two other things. it has been over 150 days since we started this legislature. we should be dealing with immigration reform. we are not doing that, and i want to finish my story about the mon at the family -- montez family who are from colorado
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who could never get affordable insurance and now are able to, under the -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for 30 seconds. mr. perlmutter: they have three children. they work two jobs. neither of the mom or dad, their employers don't provide health insurance. finally after all these years they have been able to get health insurance at about $150 using the credits that are available under the affordable care act and the children's health program that this congress has passed. these people have health care for the first time in their marriage, which has been for a couple decades, and they are very thankful. this is a good thanksgiving season for the montez family. with that i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. the gentleman from colorado reserves. the gentleman from florida is recognized. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, i yield two minutes to the distinguished gentleman from texas, mr. smith. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas is recognized for two minutes. mr. smith: mr. speaker, i thank
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the gentleman from florida for yielding me time. mr. speaker, i support h.r. 3309, the innovation act and the rule we are debating now. this bipartisan legislation brings much needed reforms to our patent litigation process which continues to be plagued by patent trolls. patent trolls use weak patents to extort millions of dollars from innocent business owners due to frivolous patent infringement lawsuits. businesses are forced to decide between years of costly litigation or a settlement. the number of patent infringement claims has almost doubled in the past three years. "the new york times" reported that one lawyer filed patent lawsuits against 1,638 companies in the past five years. these lawsuits soak up capital that is better spent on investment, innovation, and job creation. in fact a 2012 study by the boston university school of law
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found that patent trolls cost the american economy $80 billion annually. the study also found that defendants paid $29 billion to patent trolls in 2011 alone. the innovation act targets abusive patent litigation while protecting legitimate patent infringement claims. it provides accountability on the front end of litigation by requiring parties to state exactly why they are filing suit. h.r. 3309 also requires parties who file meritless patent claims to pay the alternatives fees of their victims as a disincentive to pursue their baseless claims. these reforms are vital to restore accountability and reign in abusive, frivolous, and costly patent lawsuits. i urge my colleagues to support this important legislation. i thank chairman goodlatte for introducing this bipartisan bill. mr. speaker, i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas yields
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back. the gentleman from florida reserves. the gentleman from colorado. mr. polis: thank you. i'd like to yield a minute and a half to the gentlelady from california, a member of the judiciary committee, one of the key architects and somebody who worked very hard on this bill, ms.chu. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from california is recognized for one minute and a half. ms.chu: i rise today in support of the innovation act. this bill will help curb abusive lawsuits brought by patent assertion entities, more commonly known as patent trolls. rather than relying on patents to protect investments in new innovative technologies, these actors abuse our patent system. they threaten legitimate businesses and consumers with costly litigation for selling or using a product that falls under their overly broad patent. the patent system is nothing short of a net for them to cast in hopes of extorting settlement fees. right now this scheme is costing our economy $29 billion every year.
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while the bill is not perfect, the innovation act is a promising first step towards reigning in these abusive tactics. i still have concerns with provisions that address fee shifting and the federal judiciary. and we need to ensure that the patent office is fully funded, but this conversation will continue beyond stayed's vote, and my hope is to see these concerns addressed for the american people. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back her time. the gentleman from colorado reserves. the gentleman from florida is recognized. mr. polis: mr. speaker, i -- mr. nugent: i yield one minute to the gentleman from colorado. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from california, mr. rohrabacher, is recognized for one minute. mr. rohrabacher: i reluctantly rise in favor of the rule because it makes an extremely important amendment, my own, and several others, approves them as they come on the floor, but i oppose final passage because even with those amendments they do not do
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enough to make this bill worth supporting. one of the most important amendments made is my amendment as i stated which would strike the section of this legislation which eliminates for the small inventor, for the independent inventor, the right of judicial review if he is being mishandled, if his case is being mishandled by the patent system, and let me just note that if, indeed, this was to protect, if we were going to protect the little guy, if that was the purpose of this bill, there wouldn't be a question here. we are here eliminating the little guy's right to even go to court if he's being mistreated by the patent system. also -- let me just note, a rule not made in favor was marcy kaptur's amendment which would have, again, protected the little guy. we are being told this protects the little guy, yet they won't allow marcy kaptur's amendment which is aimed at protecting the little guy from even coming to a vote.
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the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from california is recognized for 30 seconds. mr. rohrabacher: thank you very much. we hear over and over again this is about patent trolls and about hinting there are illegitimate patents that we are talking about. we are talking about legitimate patents and the patent troll, let's just note, is who he is going against supposedly? it is multinational mega, mega corporations that routinely infringe on the little guy. but yet marcy kaptur, while we are trying to protect the rights of the little guy against these giant corporations like google, instead we have not permitted her amendment to come forward. this is the greatest attack, this bill, on the small inventor i have ever seen in 25 years. ask for support for the rule but oppose the bill. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. the gentleman from florida reserves. the gentleman from colorado is recognized. mr. polis: thank you, mr. chair. i'd like to yield two minutes
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to the gentleman from cardenas. mr. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from california is recognized for two minutes. mr. cardenas: i rise in support of h.r. 3309, the innovation act. this bill will allow businesses of all sizes and in all industries to devote their time and resources to job creation, research development, and continue to support the innovation that makes u.s. companies so competitive in our global market. i have heard from businesses and associations a -- in a cross sector of industries asking for passage of this bill so they can more fully dedicate themselves to building their businesses and the u.s. economy. i have heard for support for h.r. 3309 from the motion picture association of america and movie studios such as 20th century fox who are our economic drivers in los angeles and across the country. there is other widespread and bipartisan supporters such as u.s. chamber of commerce, the
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national association of realtors, the national association of broadcasters which shows how essential patent reform is for american businesses and all industries. mr. speaker, i ask for unanimous consent that these letters of support be inserted into the congressional record. thank you, mr. speaker. while we can all agree that this is not a perfect bill, its passage will allow our businesses to continue to fuel the u.s. economy and recovery rather than battle abusive litigation. i urge my colleagues to support innovation by voting yes on final passage of the innovation act. thank you very much, mr. speaker. i yield back my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from california yields back. the gentleman from florida is recognized. mr. nugent: mr. speaker, i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from colorado. mr. polis: i'd like to inquire if the gentleman has any other speakers. mr. nugent: i do not. mr. polis: i'm prepared to close. i yield myself such time as i may consume. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado is recognized for as much time as he wishes. mr. polis: the gentleman from
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georgia, mr. collins, rightly asserted that the democrats did not, in fact, when they were in charge of the legislature and both chambers, fix our broken immigration system. however we did pass the dream act, and while given that this is football season and i think that my friend, the gentleman from georgia, perhaps shares affinity for football, while we did not, in fact, score a touchdown and fix our broken immigration system, at least we got a field goal. we are still waiting for the republicans to match our field goal here if we can't score a touchdown with comprehensive immigration reform, and we look forward to improving these bills that have passed out of the committee before the asbestos bill, before the patent reform bill, and need the work of the full membership of this body to improve them. . legislation is not a fine wine, when it sits in a barrel it improves itself. it needs to be actively worked
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on to improve it. i hope it is a matter of days or hours or minutes until we can dust off these immigration bills that chairman goodlatte and the judiciary committee have worked on, and improve upon them. so that this body can actually move forward and score a field goal, a touchdown or more. and finally replace our broken immigration system with one that reflects our values as americans, restores the rule of law, reduces our deficit by $200 billion, creates six million jobs for american citizens, secures our borders and implements workplace enforcement of our immigration system. i'm confident that we can do that working together. just as we are working together on these bills that are before us today. now, as i indicated earlier, while this bill does distribute patent bill does har-- the patent bill does harvest some low-hanging fruit, there remains work to be done to create a 21st century
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intellectual property protection system for our country. one such effort was an amendment that i offered, polis amendment 5 that was not allowed under this rule. this amendment reflects a bill that i sponsor with mr. marino that is in regards to demand letter transparency acts. even the recipient of one demand letter can even be a death sentence for a small, one, two, three-person company. the threat of a demand letter alone can jeopardize a company's ability to raise funds, can scare away potential customers, and god forbid actually defending a patent lawsuit can cost hundreds of thousands of millions of dollars of legal bills. which to a one or two or three-person company is simply a matter of shutting the doors because they cannot afford to do that. at the rules committee yesterday i offered my bipartisan amendment, based on legislation that i introduced with representative marino and representative deutch. that would provide a comprehensive approach to
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increased transparency and accountability in the demand letter process. and while our amendment was not made in order, i'm grateful we did include at least some slight provisions regarding who owns shell corporations, amendment 4 was allowed. we plan to continue to press forward on the need to address this issue through meaningful legislation. our bill would require certain entities to provide additional disclosure information to the p.t.o. and to the demand letter recipient so these startups and mom and pop restaurant owners and stores will know who is sending these demand letters and whether the claims they're making are truthful or grounded at all or just a scam. our bill would establish a searchable and accessible public registry of demand letters and clarify that the federal trade commission could use its authority to impose civil penalties to go after patent trolls. while the f.t.c. has announced its intent to investigate p.a.e.'s, our bill would clarify the role to use
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enforcement against p.a.e.'s. our amendment would prevent patent trolls from hiding behind shell companies and to share information and increase reporting so that regulatory authorities and the p.t.o. are on alert as to which patents are being frivolously asserted by whom. in conjunction with litigation reforms that are proposed in this underlying bill, our proposal would produce a more robust patent market and a more productive and predictable and competitive economy. our proposal is supported by a diverse group of individuals and organizations, including dish network, public knowledge, the national restaurant association, the electronic frontier foundation, the national retail federation, the direct marketing association, the mobile marketing association, the association of american advertising agencies, among many others. mr. speaker, for once this body is moving forward on bipartisan legislation that will help spur innovation and economic growth. the first bill that we're
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considering with regard to private equity will help increase job growth and job creation in our country. by removing a regulatory burden that was put in without the proper justification. private equity funds had nothing to do with the meltdown in 2008 and 2009, nor do they represent any systemic risk to our economy. they simply allow people to aggregate their resources, to buy stock, equity in companies. we have a cap on the debt to equity ratio of 2-1. and they do what they do and people earn money and people lose money and that's how the economy works. but there is absolutely no systemic risk. and some of these dollar amount s sound high but when we talked about in rules committee yesterday, you might have a private equity fund that is $300 million that. sounds like a lot of money. that's the amount of money they have to invest over a period of years. $300 million, they invest that over five, six, seven years.
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that's not their operational budget. their operational budget is 2% or less of that every year. so with $300 million fund, private equity fund, might have an annual budget of $6 million. now, again, $6 million sounds like a lot of money. it certainly is. but when compliance with the s.e.c. reform is $500,000, as has been estimated, you're alking about a sizable percentage of your annual operating budget. so that means you have to hire a couple people less, you might not be able to do that extra investment that you didn't have the ability to do. you might not be able to invest in that additional company and help it grow and create jobs because of regulatory compliance that has nothing to do with systemic risk. mr. speaker, as this session of congress comes to a close, the first session of the 113th congress, there's much at this -- that this body has left undone. while the other chamber across the way has acted on
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overwhelming bipartisan measures that help fix our immigration system, saving $200 billion, creating over six million jobs, securing our borders, restoring the rule of law, and uniting families, this body has not passed a single bill. in that area. and while the other body has passed a bill that would prevent companies from discriminating against gay and lesbian employees with strong bipartisan support, this body has not even brought such a bill to committee or the floor. and while i'm pleased to see the bipartisan innovation act and small business capital act and job preservation act come to the floor today, although i'd like to see them with a more open process and let more ideal -- ideas from both sides of the aisle to be introduced as amendments, i just hope that the majority of this body sees fit to hold votes on these other issues, immigration reform, employment nondiscrimination, as well. which i'm confident would pass the floor of the house today.
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as i talked to many tech companies and small businesses in my district, many of the purported beneficiaries of this modest patent reform bill, they support it. but they support immigration reform more. they say, good job, now get immigration reform done. that's what i'm hearing from employers in my district and businesses in my district. i hope that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are hearing the same. our nation cannot afford to maintain a 20th century intellectual property protection system in a digital and biological era. this bill does not correct that, it does not change that but it is a modest step forward, an important part of reforming parts of the process that democrats and republicans, many stakeholders, can agree are broken. the measure contains bipartisan , balanced proposals, just as h.r. 15 does, the comprehensive immigration bill in the house with over 190 bipartisan sponsors. and just as this bill will
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continue to incentivize entrepreneurship, so too, times 10, times 100, would comprehensive immigration reform which includes a startup visa that allows entrepreneurs who have already received commitments of investment to come to this country and create their jobs here. we are turning jobs for americans away every day we fail to act on immigration reform. we can bring h.r. 15 to the rules committee and to the floor of the house next week. or we can stay the following week and give this body the opportunity to send a bill to president obama's desk, to finally replace our broken immigration system with one that works. mr. speaker, if we defeat the previous question, i'll offer an amendment to the rule to bring up house resolution 424, ranking member slaughter's resolution, that prohibblets an adjournment of the house until we adopt a budget conference report. this body should not adjourn until we could prevent a second government shutdown and prevent a fiscal crisis. mr. speaker, i ask unanimous
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consent to insert the text of the amendment in the record along with extraneous material immediately prior to the vote on the previous question. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, so ordered. mr. polis: mr. speaker, while i'm actively encouraging members on both sides iflet to get behind the he -- sides of the aisle to get behind the innovation act, i must urge my colleagues to vote no and defeat the previous question, as well as a no vote on the restrictive rule. host: that we can send the message -- i hope that we can send the message that we need to bring immigration reform to the floor of this house, rather than let the four bills that have already emerged out of committee stay sitting and aging and not getting any better while we fast-track asbestos, while we fast-track modest patent reforms. the time has come to act on immigration reform. please join me on voting no on the previous question and no on the rule. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from colorado yields back all of his time. the gentleman from florida is recognized. mr. nugent: thank you, mr.
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speaker. and, speaking to some of the comments that were made, particularly as it relates to football, and i guess that, you know, we talked about field goal and three points. but here's the position that this house has taken, the majority has taken in the house as it relates to immigration. it's about first downs, it's about moving the ball forward in measured steps. about getting it right the first time. not going through what we've gone through with these huge -- absolutely. mr. polis: thank you. it seems more like we've been in a time-out for three months since these bills have passed committee. i yield back. mr. nugent: reclaiming my time. it takes time. you know this. to move meaningful legislation through and to get it right the first time. we're living with, you know, with some things, when you have these megabills, thousands of
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pages, a thousand-page immigration bill, the health care act, end of the day, let's do this in a reasoned, reasonable approach. because we want immigration reform, because we know we have a broken immigration system. we absolutely know that. and i think this house has taken the right approach in ing things in a measured way to get first downs until we get to the end zone where we all want to be. now, as we notice on this bill, even though there's strong bipartisanon support on both of these pieces of legislation, we still have some that aren't happy because sometimes bills never get to exactly where every want -- everybody wants them to be and i get that. in a perfect world we'd get everything we want. it's not a perfect world. we don't get everything we want. ball is about moving the
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forward. and i think that my good friend from colorado has talked eloquently about the issues as it relates to patent reform and private equity, because i know he has been part of that world. he speaks from experience in those areas. is it everything that you want? probably not. we heard from the chairman of the committee, it's not everything he wanted. but it is a step in the right direction. it's moving the ball forward, it's getting the first down, it's moving it so that we can win the game. not a political party, but the american people. and consumers can win. and the holders of patents can win. that's what this is all about. demand letters, i lived through this as a sheriff. when we used to get demand letters that we're going to get sued and the whole idea behind the fact was they thought we would settle for $30,000 or $40,000, to make them go away. and here's what happened. the sheriffs got smart and they put together a consortium of
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sheriffs, 60 out of 67, in a sheriff's fund, self-insurance fund, and guess what? the anged the tables and dynamics in regard to it, justs that bill will do -- just as this bill will do. what we did was say, guess what, we're no longer going to be blackmailed into giving money. on a legitimate case you're going to settle. but on a case where it's frisk louis, we would say -- frivolous, we would say, no thanks, let's go to trial, and they never want to do that because it's expensive on their end too, particularly when they could wind up paying for that. so, mr. speaker, a lot has been said today and i think a lot more is going to be said after we pass this rule. so, mr. speaker, as we talk about what i think is fair, that abusive patent legislation or litigation is a growing
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problem, we've heard that from both sides today, under our current patent system, small businesses and startups simply don't have the resources to compete with the patent trolls. they're easy targets, they routinely settle and regardless of the merits of the case, to avoid hefty legal costs. we understand that. therefore it's important that we level the playing field for our innovators, our innovators that actually create something, an idea, out of thin air, and create something that can be turned into jobs in the future. . regardless where the members fall on the underlying legislation, it seems we are all in agreement we need to combat this destructive practice. we are also in agreement that we need jobs. the rule provides for consideration of a bill that will give small companies more access to capital, more opportunities to grow, more opportunities to create jobs. the rule makes in order
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.mportant, germane amendments mr. speaker, we heard a call to vote no on the rule. for other reasons let's talk about creating jobs in america. let's talk about protecting our innovators. let's not get caught up in the politics of the day. let's do the right thing for the american people today. the thing that is going to be heard today in this house. let's vote on a rule and let's pass that rule. i support this rule and i encourage my colleagues to vote yes on the rule as well. mr. speaker, with that i yield back the balance of my time. i move the previous question on the resolution. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from florida yields back all of his time. the question is on ordering the previous question on the resolution. so many as are in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it. the gentleman from colorado. mr. polis: on that i request the yeas and nays. the speaker pro tempore: the yeas and nays are requested. those favoring a vote on the yeas and nays will rise.
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a sufficient number having arisen, the yeas and nays are ordered. pursuant to clause 8 of rule 20 , further proceedings on this uestion will be postponed. pursuant to clause 12-a, rule 1, the house will stand in recess subject to the call of the chair.
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question barry mccaffrey is the best commander to come out of my generation of soldiers. o, barry, i'm honored. my thanks as well to wes. your c.e.o. and other members of the nadcp for inviting me here today. let me further acknowledge judge robert russell. i still remember vividly my
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visit to your courtroom in 2009. it's good to see you again, judge. other members of the judiciary drug court professionals, veteran mentors who make these courts innovative and successful, fellow veterans, v.a. colleagues, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, we i, now, you better than that we are guiding monumental change in the way we address crime in this country. instead of jailing veterans who have been brought up on charges, are simply releasing them back to the streets, you have underwritten treatment as a powerful option for dealing with those who have broken our laws. my thanks to the nadcp for helping us all through this ambitious undertaking. the number of veterans courts has grown over the past five years. there are perhaps four or five
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of them in january, 2009, as i arrive to assume these responsibilities at the v.a. and barry mccaffrey's urging, i went to buffalo to visit judge russell. the power of the veterans court concept right then was clear, undeniable, and compelling. and since that visit, v.a. has been your full partner agreeing to bring all of its capabilities to bear wherever a judge decided to establish a veterans court. that offer is still good today. last month v.a.'s justice outreach specialists reported 257 veterans courts in operation throughout the country. so from four to five, 257. an increase of nearly 90 this past year alone, with another dozen or so slated to open before the end of the year. so again my thanks and
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congratulations to all of you for what you have done for veterans. you see, in my opinion we'll never be able to do enough for the men and women who have signed on to safeguard our way of life. veterans comprise just over 7%, 7% of the entire population in this great country. 22.2 million of them live amongst us. today less than 1% of americans wear our country's uniforms. we ended the draft 40 years ago, and these men and women are the folks who picked that load up for all of us. these are the folks who guarantee our vibrant democracy. of our 22 million living veterans, less than nine million are enrolled in v.a. health care. nearly 58,000 are estimated to be homeless on any given night. i am told that incarceration is the number one predictor of
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homelessness. and i'm also told that there is a nexus among factors that describe both veterans' homelessness and vet ran suicides. factors like depression, insomnia, substance abuse disorder, pain, failed relationships. so if we are going to break the cycle between incarceration and homelessness, we'll have to raise our level of collaboration and leverage all of our assets to address these factors which seem so pervasive with -- when dealing with troubled veterans. again, depression, insomnia, substance abuse, disorder, pain, failed relationships. addressing these factors requires v.a.'s collaboration with the host of partners. i would start with the u.s. interagency council on homelessness. the departments of housing and urban development.
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labor, justice, defense, health and human services, education, the i.r.s., the social security and small business administrations. as well as a number of other federal, state, and local agencies and organizations. veterans are counting on us to solve these challenges. for its part, v.a. operates a large health care, integrated health care system, maybe one of the larger ones in the country, 151 medical centers, 827 community-based outpatient clinics, 300 vet centers, and another 70 outreach and mobile clinics that reach out into the most rural areas to find veterans who live remotely. over 1,700 health care access points nationwide. but beyond health care v.a.
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provides $10 billion in education assistance annually. second only to the department of education. v.a. guarantees nearly 1.8 million home loans. the only zero down entity in the nation and our foreclosure rate is the lowest amongst all categories of mortgage loans. v.a.'s the nation's ninth largest life insurance enterprise, with $1.3 trillion in coverage, 6.7 million clients, and 95% customer satisfaction rating. through the leadership of the president, the support of the congress, and the advice and assistance of our terrific partners in the veteran service organizations, as well as our partnership with a host of federal, state, and nonprofit organizations like nadcp, progress since 2009 includes a 50% growth in v.a.'s budget
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requests from 99.8 billion, to $1 2.7 billion for this year. enrollment of over two million more veterans in v.a. health care. 62 new community-based outpatient clinics opened, including our first major v.a. hospital in 17 years in las vegas, nevada. a drop in backlog compensation claims we have all been talking about and working on, but a drop of about 36% in those claims in the last 250 days, as the deliberate plan we put together involving people, processes, and technologies have come together, has come together powerfully. a 24% decrease in the estimated number of homeless veterans. a remarkable trend during the period of an economic challenge. usually during these periods homelessness goes up.
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v.a.'s mental health funding has increased by nearly 57% since 2009. our budget requests for f.y. 2014 includes $7 billion to increase access to mental health services. a year ago the president directed the hiring of 1,600 additional mental health professionals. v.a. has exceeded that goal and has also hired 800 peer support specialists to augment the professional staff. one of our most successful mental health initiatives has been our veterans crisis line. many of you know about it. d.o.d. knows it as the military crisis line, same number, same trained mental health professionals answering the phone 24 hours a day, seven days a week. an example of our partnering to deliver optimal care to those in need. since start-up in 2007, the veterans crisis line has answered over 890,000 phone
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calls from veterans in need. most importantly 30,000 of those callers were rescued from uicides in progress. three years ago v.a. asked itself whether we might be overmedicating our patients, especially those under mental health treatment. v.a. worked with d.o.d. and together we developed and v.a.'s implementing the joint d.o.d. -v.a. pain management guidelines that discourage overuse of opiates in favor of other medications and therapies. some of our 21 health care networks have taken steps to reduce the use of opiates. since 2012, one network in particular, the one based in
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minneapolis, has cut its use of high dose opiates by more than 50% and all but eliminated oxycontin prescriptions, ecreasing them by 99%. for veterans entering the justice system already dealing with mental health or substance abuse issues, we established something called the veterans justice outreach, v.j.o., it's an office of 172 full-time specialists working directly with justice officials to see that veterans who are either before the court or already in jail get the care they need that courts -- and that courts are supported in their consideration of best possible alternatives to incarceration. we are in support of you on this. we are also working to connect our v.j.o. specialists with american indian tribal justice ystems to do the same thing.
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in their first year, 2010, v.j.o. specialists served about 5,800 veterans. this year that number is up to nearly 36,000 veterans, and we plan to hire another 75 specialists next year. very few veterans served by v.j.o. specialists are first time offenders, and i think most of you in the room know that. in fact, they average seven prior arrests. of the 93% who have spent time in jail or prison, 20% have spent a year or more behind bars. of the veterans in this program, 40% have been homeless at least once. these are the challenging segments of our veteran population, but the numbers also tell us we are making positive differences, positive differences for them when we work with the courts to provide these veterans v.a. care and
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services. 2/3 of veterans before the treatment courts successfully complete their training, their treatment regiments, when they receive v.a. services, they experience an 88% reduction in arrests from year prior to to year after treatment court admission. they also benefit from a 30% increase in stable housing in the year a v.a., the courts, and our volunteer mentors have been able to attack this cycle between homelessness and incarceration. giving these veterans a much better chance for success. prevention doesn't always work, and some veterans do still go to jail or prison. and so we have increased our presence there as well. our health care for re-entry health program, hcrv, care for entry veterans, i don't make these up, has 44 full-time specialists working and 1,000
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prisons. that's about 80% of all prisons in the united states. our goal is to connect soon-to-be released veterans with v.a. health care, housing assistance, educational assistance, vocational counseling, and training to help re-entry veterans become productive. we currently assist about 9,000 re-entering veterans each year, but we also know by an estimate that that's probably one in six of all veterans being released. so last year we added a new online capability called vrss, veterans re-entry search service. to enable corrections officials to quickly and easily identify any veteran in their i.n.s. igs -- institutions. in just the past three months the number of jail systems using it has more than doubled with 30 more in the process of accessing the service. i have written to each governor
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encouraging collaboration with us through vrss. with greater participation we'll be able to better identify and treat veterans in need of our services and hopefully reducing their appearances before you. we intend to make vrss available to the courts as well. veterans who may be dealing with ptsd, t.b.i., depression, insomnia, substance use disorder, and pain need and deserve our help. we have an opportunity to help them with health care, safe housing, education, and jobs. a chance to rebuild lives that somehow lost their way. in closing in the spring of 2012 navy veteran donald martin parked his pickup truck at a virginia rest area. it had broken down. and federal park rangers found him with an opened container of
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alcohol, charged him with d.u.i. martin, 57, had been living in his sister's basement essentially homeless, after losing his job, unemployed, and going through a divorce, failed relationship. he had also been battling alcohol dependence for decades and had two d.u.i.'s on his record. so substance use disorder. a third d.u.i. conviction would mean automatic incarceration, and another slip in the downward spiral in his post navy life. his federal defense attorney recommended participating in a veterans treatment court. without knowing much about it, martin consented. the u.s. attorney agreed to take the d.u.i. charge off the docket, allowing him to appear before a veterans treatment court. that treatment court team charged robert, who i think may
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be here today, the u.s. attorney, martin's defense attorney, his probation officers, and a v.a. justice outreach specialist from the salem v.a. medical certainty helped martin develop a plan towards recovery and he began attending a 24-week, outpatient substance abuse treatment program at the salem v.a. it included weekly individual and group treatment sessions. he also met with a vocational rehab counselor to address his need for employment. two months into his participation and veterans treatment court, martin was hired as a sprinkler system installer. he's later told the court, as he was dwrad waiting, this was a boost to my -- graduating, this was a boost to my self-esteem and so bright. veterans treatment court lasted six months during which he successfully completed his substance abuse treatment and
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maintained his so bright -- sow bright and employment. when the six months were up, the judge presented him with challenge coin, symbolizing his graduation from his court. today martin remains employed, has maintained a sow bright, and has had no further run-ins with the law. he's been promoted three times and received the performance bonus from his employer. he's also reconnected with his ex-wife. martin says of his arrest and aftermath, treatment court changed my life. the court wasn't against me. they were actually in my corner. they wanted me to do well to get my life straightened out. you wouldn't believe the turn of events in my life. so, none of us can imagine a better ending to donald martin's story, but it's all because a judge and his treatment court team dared to care.
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i'm sure each of you in this room has a similar story to tell . so to all of you, my heartfelt thanks for giving these veterans a chance to demonstrate that they were the folks who carried the safety of our country on their shoulders. i'm honored to be here this morning and honored to get to see my old friend, barry mccaffrey, thank you very much. >> by the way, veterans administration officials and others will testify at a house veterans' affairs subcommittee hearing on the status of v.a. disability claims. that's coming up at 3:00 p.m. eastern over on c-span2. here on c-span waiting for the house to gavel back in which should be at about 2:00 p.m. eastern. they are returning for a rule vote on two bills, one that would modify the patent inspringment litigation process, the other would exempt most private equity firms from registering with the s.e.c. we'll have the house live when they return on c-span.
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earlier today at the white house in washington, president obama spoke about the economy. calling for the raising of the minimum wage. saying that the income gap between america's rich and poor is, quote, a defining challenge of our time. the president speaking this afternoon at the white house about the affordable care act. he's speaking to the youth summit gathering there coming up at 2:05 eastern. can you follow that live on c-span.org. meanwhile report out today about the annual program for international student assessment, the annual international assessment test for 15-year-olds which shows scores in math, reading, and science posted by 15-year-olds were plat, while their counterparts in other asian province and countries sored according to those results. randy whitegarden is the president of the federation of speechers. she spoke today and responded to the latest report on those scores.
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>> stayed is like the day after day. i'm sure most of you filed some stories about pisa and about the sky falling and things like that. although i haven't actually seen much of that. i saw actually a lot of really good reporting under the numbers, and i just want to thank all of you for that. we have been through this rodeo before. this is the third or fourth time that pisa results, the third time in my memory, but the -- what fifth time does it say that the united states is pretty much in the middle of the pack on mathematics, science, and english? particularly this year where there was a real focus on
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mathematics for the first time in 10 years. it says two or three things. number one it says that things like poverty, socioeconomics reilly matter because you look at the states like massachusetts and connecticut that did well and what they have done and you look at the data when you pull it out and try to account for poverty and you see where the statistics are. but there's more to this because if you just stop there we are in the inane debate that we have been in for the last 20 years. because the issue is not whether poverty matters, but what do we do about it? the dominant strategy, educational strategy that we have done about it for the last 10 years is chind and race to the top. -- no child left behind and race
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to the top. there's been other things like charters and competition and now new standards. but that's the hyper testing, the sanctioning of teachers, the closing schools. that's the strategy. i think what we learned from the last results is that strategy is not what works to move the needle. it keeps us where we are, but it's not what works to move the needle. so that's why you start looking at what do the other countries do that actually the one that is outlapped us, what do they do? i'm not suggesting we should be finland and i'm not suggesting we should be shanghai, two places i have been to and love and adore, but the united states is different, and we just -- but we have to look at some of the things that they have done and say, can we adapt that here? let me click off the four things
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and then let me go to what we are trying to do to accomplish that. number one -- >> about four minutes more. >> that's ok. number one we actually have this -- the countries that outcompete us actually really val ue, deeply respect and value public education. in fact, the pisa results actually have a big caution flag, saying that for my friends at the examiner, they have a big caution flag about the -- the data is important to look at. a big caution flag about choice and competition. and about how that has actually increased segregation and increased poverty in countries like chile who have used it as the dominant education theory. number two, it says a lot about preparing teachers, supporting teachers, giving them time to corroborate as tom friedman has seen in shanghai and has written about it.
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number three, parents are really engaged. and they are really engaged not just told what to do, but they are really engaged. number four, standards matter, but done the right way, not just thrown out there and said go do it, but really implemented well. and you see then in the countries that outcompete us. and last, poverty does matter, ut we need to lead with equity and equity strategies in order to address it. so things like pre-k, like wrap around services. that's what it says. so the bottom line is what do you do about this? there's a whole bunch of groups, including our union and n.e.a., d the opportunity to learn group of communities, partners, parents who actually have
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started talking about this for the last two or three years, and we have what we call now the principal for unity. we have having a big day of action on december 9 about reclaiming the promise of public education. not as it is today, not as it was 50 years ago, but in order to actually be something that fulfills our collective responsibility for individual opportunity for all kids. so that means really doing things such as having well prepared teachers. and if teachers are well prepared, and if they are supported, and if they still can't do their job, they shouldn't be there. but we have to have their eval -- fair evaluation system. we also have to have standards. i'm big believer in the common core, but they have to be implemented right and we have to do the kinds ever things like california has done which is testing at least for the time team so that we can actually prepare and actually try to make
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these work. number three, we have to actually focus on poverty about how we ensure that kids have a level playing field. so the pre-k program, the wrap around services we need to do. and last, every school that works, every district that works focuses and makes sure that schools are welcoming, safe environments. working, safe and collaborative environments. you can't tell me a district or state or country that works where that notion of collaboration as opposed to competition, that notion of welcoming a safe environment so that schools are central to communities are not the dominant theory as opposed to testing and sanctioning. and so that's what we are rying to do. work with community, bottom up, align with solutions that communities need, great
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neighborhood public schools and ultimately really trying to make sure that every -- that public education is an anchor of our dreaks, a propeller of our community and probably most important, really, really make sure that we give and figure out how to enable all kids to have the opportunity to not only dream their dreams but achieve them. >> all of that event later on in our program schedule on the c-span networks. you'll also find it live shortly at c-span.org. here on c-span, we're waiting for the house to gavel back in. they'll be in shortly for a rule vote. two bills under consideration. one, if they pass the rule today, they'll take up a bill that will exempt most private equity firms from registering with the securities and exchange commission. the other bill, if the rule passes, will be debated tomorrow, likely. it would modify the patent infringement litigation process, trying to discourage abuse of the system. again, those votes coming up
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momentarily. so we'll stay here live on c-span with a note about our companion network, c-span2, in just a moment we'll bring you news coverage from the pentagon with defense secretary chuck hagel and general martin dempsey who today said teams ought to be careful what they post online. if they don't believe their parents, they may believe the pentagon's top general, says the associated press. he warned the next generation of possible military recruits are -- damage that could come from bad behavior online. that news conference on c-span2 shortly. now live to the house. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2013] the question on ordering the previous question on house resolution 429 and adoption of the resolution, if ordered. the first electronic vote will be conducted as a 15-minute vote. the remaining electronic vote will be conducted as a five-minute vote. the unfinished business is the vote on ordering the previous question on house resolution
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429 on which the yeas and nays are ordered. the clerk will report the title of the resolution. the clerk: house calendar number 77, house resolution 429. resolution providing for consideration of the bill h.r. 3309, to amend title 35 united states code and the leahy-smith american advance act, to make improvements and technical corrections and for other purposes. and providing for consideration of the bill h.r. 1105, to amend the investment advisors act of 1940 to provide registration exemptions for private equity fund advisors, and for other purposes. the speaker pro tempore: the question is on ordering the previous question. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a 15-minute vote. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for political or commercial purposes is expressly prohibited by the u.s. house of representatives.]
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the speaker pro tempore: the nays are 194. the previous question is ordered. the question is on adoption of the resolution. so many as are in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair,
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the ayes have it. the gentleman from colorado. mr. polis: on that i ask a recorded vote. the speaker pro tempore: a record the vote is requested. those favoring a robbeded vote will rise. a sufficient number having arisen, a recorded vote is ordered. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a five-minute vote. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for political or commercial purposes is expressly prohibited by the u.s. house of representatives.]
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the speaker pro tempore: the nays are 185. the resolution is adopted. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid upon the table. he house will be in order.
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lear the aisles. the house will be in order. would members please take their conversations from the floor. clear the well.
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lear the aisles. for what purpose does the gentleman from texas seek recognition? >> mr. speaker, pursuant to house resolution 429, i call up h.r. 1105, the small business
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capital access and job preservation act, and ask for its immediate consideration by the house. the speaker pro tempore: the clerk will report the title of the bill. the clerk: union calendar number 197, h.r. 1105, a bill to amend the investment advisors act of 1940 to provide for registration exemption for private equity fund advisors, nd for other purposes. the speaker pro tempore: once again, members are asked to remove their conversations from the floor of the house chamber. to clear the aisles. so that the house may be in order. pursuant to house resolution
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429 and amendment in the nature of a substitute consisting of text of rules committee print 113-29, shall be considered as adopted and the bill as amended shall be considered as read. after one hour of debate on the bill as amended, it shall be in order to consider the further amendment printed in part b of house report 113-283, if offered by the gentlelady from new york, mrs. maloney, or her designee, which shall be considered as read and shall be separately debatable for 10 minutes equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an opponent. the gentleman from texas, mr. hensarling, and the gentlelady from california, ms. waters, ach will control 30 minutes. the chair recognizes the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: thank you, mr. speaker. i ask unanimous consent that all members may have five legislative days to revise and and submit remarks extraneous material for the record on h.r. 1105, currently under consideration. the speaker pro tempore: without objection.
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mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i recognize myself for as much time as i may consume. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, since congress was not in session last week, perhaps some of my colleagues missed the front page headline from "the washington post." i read, quote, among american workers, poll finds unprecedented anxiety about jobs and economy. according to the report, american workers are living with unprecedented economic anxiety, more than six in 10 worry that they will lose their jobs. nearly one in three said they worry a lot about losing their jobs. it goes on to mention an american named jon stewart, wakes up every morning at 1:30 a.m. for a two-hour commute to catch two different buses in philadelphia so he can get to work on time. in the newspaper he said, quote, i can't save money to buy the things i need to live as a human being. mr. speaker, we don't have to
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read "the washington post," all we have to do is listen to our own constituents. since even today millions, millions of our fellow countrymen remain unemployed and underemployed. i hear these stories every week myself. recently i heard from ida in wills point, texas, in the fifth congressional district that i represent. she and her husband own -- and her 79-year-old husband own a small trucking company, but she wrote me that quote, because of increasing regulations and taxes in the past four years, we have lost all but two of our trucks. she goes on to write me, my husband is the only driver right now because i can no longer drive. he drives full-time, 3,500 miles a week most weeks because we can't live on his social security. she says, quote, we are really stuck in a hole. millions, mr. speaker, are stuck in a hole. today we have an opportunity, mr. speaker, to do something to
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help raise many of our fellow countrymen out of that hole of economic anxiety and economic hardship. today we have the opportunity to pass h.r. 1105, the small business capital access and jobs preservation act. i want to commend the bipartisan group of members, two republicans and two democrats, who introduced the bill. mr. hurt of virginia, mr. himes of connecticut, mr. garrett of new jersey, and mr. cooper of tennessee. as chairman of the financial services committee, mr. speaker, i want to thank all the members of the committee who came together across party lines to approve the bill. mr. speaker, nearly one third of the democrats who sit on our committee joined with 30 republicans in supporting h.r. 1105. in short, mr. speaker, this is indeed a bipartisan jobs bill. we know that small businesses face an incredible red tape
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burden. in fact, a recent survey of the national federation of independent business said that, quote, government regulations and red tape are the single most important challenge that small businesses face in creating and preserving jobs. mr. speaker, the house is not n order. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is correct. the house is not in order. the gentleman may proceed. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i heard from another small businessperson in my district. said because of overregulation our business has devolved from one that provides a service for a customer into one that provides that same service as an afterthought while our real efforts go into paperwork.
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mr. speaker, we can debate the relative merits or demerits of the dodd-frank act, but even the primary author himself, former chairman frank, admitted that perhaps not every aspect of dodd-frank achieved perfection, and many of us would argue in a bipartisan basis that the part of the act that requires small business investors, who are private equity advisors, to register with the s.e.c. is perhaps one of those provisions that is in need of reform. this is a provision, mr. speaker, that many of us believe was aimed at wall street but ends up hurting main street. . because of this provision, small businesses face yet one more significant regulatory cost, regulatory burden, more red tape. as one of the small business
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investors testified before our committee, it's going to cost his company $200,000 every year to comply with the regulation. mr. speaker, he went on to say, quote, for larger firms, this is an insignificant cost. for medium sized firms such as ours that provides capital, it is a significant expense. pay attention to this, mr. speaker. he said, quote, this money comes directly out of our funds intended for investment into main street. in today's economy, to help pull these people out of this hole of economic anxiety, we need more private sector, more private equity investment into main street. private equity equals small business jobs. in fact, mr. speaker, between 1995 and 2010, 23,000 different companies across our nation benefited from private equity
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investment, employing three million different people and the investments that are made by private equity historically have grown jobs three times at rate of other companies. so what does this look like? i got to tell you, mr. speaker, it looks like an outfit called new mountain capital that invested in a company national coupon and logicics processing company. -- logistics processing company. they now sport 4,200 different employees. the faith of private equity looks like capital south partners, that invested in a north carolina firm, avita nonwovense, and now they have 95 employees in high point, north carolina. and i should add paraphernalia eycally, another 55 --
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parenthically, another 55 employees in my native texas. now, we may hear from some this is needed to somehow battle wall street. but let me tell you what, private equity is not wall street. it's not complex derivative trading. it's not currency swaps, mr. speaker. it is not about systemic risk. that is not what this is about. and so again this was a provision aimed at wall street that unfortunately is hitting main street. it is time to make sure that americans like john in philadelphia can live like a human being. it's time to make sure that constituents like mine, ida and her husband, don't have to drive 3,500 miles a week just so they can put food on the table. mr. speaker, it's time, again, for this institution to put jobs first, not regulators first, but jobs first. and i urge, i urge all of my colleagues to adopt h.r. 1105. i reserve the balance of my
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time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves the balance of his time. the gentlelady from california. ms. waters: i ask unanimous consent that the gentleman from massachusetts manage the time at this time. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman from massachusetts is recognized. mr. lynch: i thank the gentlelady for yielding and i thank her for her leadership on this issue. i rise today in opposition to h.r. 1105. i yield myself such time as i may consume. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. lynch: thank you. i rise today in opposition to h.r. 1105, which will create a gaping loophole for private equity fund advisors and deprive investors and regulators of important information about the risk that these funds pose. the dodd-frank act wisely required that advisors to all hedge funds, private equity fund and other private funds register and file regular reports with the s.e.c. it did this for two reasons. one, to help regulators better understand the systemic risks
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that these funds pose to the overall financial system and to provide investors in these funds with meaningful information about the funds' governance. this bill would exempt nearly every private equity fund advisor from these important disclosure requirements. some of my colleagues who support this bill will argue that because private equity funds were not the cause of the last crisis, we should not subject them to these modest transparency and accountability requirements. one of the most important lessons that we did learn during the financial crisis is that systemic threats seem to always bubble up from the opaque and unregulated sectors of the market. given the exemption, -- giving this exemption will allow threats to once again grow in the dark corners of our financial system, only showing themselves when it is too late to prevent serious harm to the american taxpayer. supporters of this bill, while well intended, will also point
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to the provisions that ensures advisors to private equity funds with leverage ratios over 2:1. this may sound attractive until you realize that every private equity fund is basically within that parameter. private equity funds invests in companies, and it is these portfolio companies that load up on leverage and that have the potential to take on outside risks, piling on leverage while the private equity fund itself appears on its surface to be modestly leveraged. a private equity fund could have a leverage ratio well below 2:1 while they are in xcess of 30:1, masking the risks they impose. nearly every private equity fund today would come in at below the 2:1 leverage cap. this provides no protection to
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the funds' investors or to the american taxpayer. mr. speaker, we learned the hard way after the recent financial crisis that systemic risks grows in the dark corners of our financial markets and the more information we can gather how the markets work, the safer we will be. the registration and reporting requirements for private equity advisors are modest and narrowly tailered but they provide investors and regulators with important information. rolling back these reforms now move us in the wrong direction. i urge my colleagues to oppose h.r. 1105, and i reserve the balance of our time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves the balance of his time the gentleman reserves the balance of his time. -- the gentleman's time is reserved. the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: i yield to a real leader on our committee and in this congress in creating jobs, i yield five minutes to the gentleman from virginia, mr. hurt. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from virginia is recognized for five minutes. mr. hurt: thank you, mr. speaker, and mr. speaker, i rise in support of h.r. 1105,
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the small business capital access and job preservation act, a bipartisan bill that representatives cooper, himes and garrett and i introduced earlier this year. i thank all of them for their leadership on this issue. i'd also like to thank chairman hensarling and again, chairman garrett, for their leadership and support on this bill that we were able to achieve a bipartisan vote out of the financial services committee. every member of this body can agree with millions of americans out of work our top focus in congress should be and it must be enacting policies to help spur job creation throughout our nation. today, the house takes up another bill to encourage economic growth and job creation by increasing the flow of private capital to small businesses that are found on main streets all across america. at a time when the available avenues of capital and credit for small businesses continue to decrease, capital investments from private equity into our communities are more important than ever. unfortunately, dodd-frank has
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placed a costly and unnecessary regulatory burden of f.c.c. registration on advisors to private equity while, by the to exempting advisors other firms. these restrict the strict private equity to -- these restrict private equity. in virginia's fifth district, my district, trr literally thousands of jobs that exist because of the investment of private equity. these critical investments allow our small businesses to innovate, expand their operations and create the jobs that our communities need. if enacted, the unnecessary burdens on advisors' private equity funds that do not have excessive leverage will be eliminated and they will be given the same exemption from the s.e.c. that venture capital advisors enjoy. this imposes an undue burden on
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mid sized and private equity firms and decrease their ability to create jobs. during our financial services committee hearing on the bill, witnesses discussed the costs these requirements would impose on private equity firms. resources that disproportionately -- it would cost thousands of dollars annually or more to comply with these requirements. it is important to note that most people, including s.e.c. chair, mary jo white, can see that private equity funds did not cause the 2008 financial crisis and are not a source of systemic risk. despite that argument being the impetus for the registration requirement under dodd-frank. these funds are not highly interconnected with other financial market participants and therefore the failure of a private equity fund would be highly unlikely to trigger cascading losses that would lead to a similar financial crisis. additionally, these funds
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invest primarily in liquid assets including small main street businesses found across our country. these businesses are diversified across multiple industries and therefore lack concentrated exposure to any single sector. furthermore, investors in private equity firms are investors who negotiate with the strongest investor protections. these sophisticated investors include public pension funds, university endowments, nonprofit organizations, many of whom are the beneficiaries. these are represented by counsel and heavily negotiate fund terms in advance of investing, including reporting governance and conflicts of interest. should also be noted that h.r. 1105 does nothing to change the urrent law of the if i dishary protections. these are already existing significant investor protections available both contractually and in the form of state and federal law and
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anti-fraud protections, investor protections exist whether or not the advisors are registered with the s.e.c. in the end, the cost of unnecessary registration represent real capital that otherwise could be used to invest in companies such as virginia candle in our district, a company that through private equity investment expanded from a garage in lynchburg, virginia, to millions of homes across the world. beyond virginia candle in virginia, private equity based companies, private equity employees over 7 1/2 million people. private equity backed companies employ over 7 1/2 million people nationwide. in over 17,000 u.s. companies. the impact of the registration requirements stand to diminish job creation in each of the congressional districts represented on this floor today. i ask all my colleagues today to join me in voting yes on h.r. 1105 and pass this bill
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from the house in order to increase the flow of private capital to our small businesses so that they can innovate, grow, create jobs for the american people. mr. speaker, i thank you and i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: i thank the gentleman. i give myself one minute. i do want to respond to the gentleman's invoking of the s.e.c. chair, mary jo white. judging from the gentleman's remarks, you'd think she might be in favor of this bill. let me tell you what she says about this bill in particular. this is a quote. our markets would not be well served by narrowing the scope of the commission's jurisdiction and oversight of these advisors with respect to this bill. she also said that private equity investors are in need of the same protection as other private fund investors. she has also said,
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the commission has brought enforcement actions. they are talking about the advisibility of having oversight over advisors and having these disclosures made. the quote is that the commission has brought enforcement actions against private equity funds and their advisory personnel involving unlawful pay to play schemes, insider trading, conflict of interest, valuation and misappropriation of assets. now, if you think about the argument that pension funds may not -- i yield myself another 30 seconds. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. lynch: when you think about the protections that are necessary for pension funds, especially, where these workers have invested their whole lives in these pension funds, you understand the need for this disclosure. this time i'd like to yield three minutes to the gentleman from minnesota, mr. ellison, an active member of the committee. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for three minutes. mr. ellison: let me thank the gentleman from massachusetts. you know, mr. speaker, before i
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launch into the substantive critique of this bill, and i urge members to vote no, i'd like to make a preliminary observation and that is when our chairman of our committee begins his presentation, making a broad based critique on legislation, members should be very careful about this because good regulation is good for american people. we need health safety protections. we need to be -- we need to be protected when -- from unsafe water, unsafe products and investors need to be protected as well. and so when any time a member of congress or anyone comes up and says, well, regulations are bad, this is obviously wrong and the american people know it and therefore when you're being told to do something just because regulations are always bad, you should be very suspicious of what's going on and dig deeper into the situation. i urge members to just consider
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how important good, solid solid regulation is to benefit the american people and i push back on anybody who just makes a funnel assault on all regulation no matter how good or how bad or just regulation in general. and this has been a theme, you know, from -- around here and i urge members to be suspicious of it. it also should be considered that when this bill is in front of us, we should know that people who have looked carefully at it, members who are wondering what they want to do on this bill should consider that the ogbonnaya administration has strongly opposed -- ogbonnaya administration has strongly oppose -- obama administration has strongly opposed this bill. this is a bill that's not going to become law anyway. there is no senate companion. i just checked. o so we're really here talking about a bill that is going to be -- threatened vetoed by the president and has no senate companion.
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it's also opposed by the s.e.c. chair and council of constitutional investors, an organization which has investors' interests in mind, as this bill is trying to make investor information more opaque, and americans for financial reform, not to mention consumer federation of america and afl-cio and state securities regulators. so the people who work with these regulations all the time don't think they're the right thing to do. and even if some members might consider that, well, maybe this might get capital to someone who wouldn't otherwise might get it, the people who regulate and use these regulations every day have carefully considered h.r. 1101 and have come to the conclusion -- 1105, that it is bad for investors, that it creates less transparency, not more, and therefore is in fact a risk to our financial
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well-being. so, americans are looking for obviously jobs. this is the big hook. people lure -- put the jobs -- one more minute? mr. lynch: i yield the gentleman an additional minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for an additional one minute. mr. ellison: a way to get anybody to vote for anything around here is to say it's going to create jobs. there's been no demonstration of how this is going to create jobs. but the point is, it will create a situation where there's less information to investors who need it. and it's important for members to know that the s.e.c. has taken enforcement actions against private equity firms. in know, for example, neilman asset management group, the s.e.c. found that registered private equity funds advisor, neilman asset management group, l.l.c., and managing director, chief executive officer and former
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c.c.o. violated the advisors act custody, antifraud compliance reporting and books and records provisions. there's a case where you have the s.e.c. using information to bring accountability in the private equity arena. also in the area of insider trading enforcement, the ground insider trading case involved an individual who allegedly stole confidential -- i'll wrap it up. mr. lynch: all right. i yield another 20 seconds. just to wrap up. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. ellison: let me wrap up by saying we urge members to vote no, to look out for advisors, even private equity advisors need transparency, not less information. a no vote is urged here. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i'm very pleased to yield four minutes to a co-author of the legislation and the chairman of the capital markets and g.s.e. subcommittee, mr. garrett of new jersey.
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the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from new jersey is recognized for four minutes. mr. garrett: i thank the chair and i thank the chair and before i give my remarks, i just want to say in response that i believe the chairman said that he is not opposed to all regulation, i think he said he's in favor of regulation. but make into are sure that it is -- but make sure it is smart and appropriate regulation. that's my position as well. and understand too, to the gentleman's point, that even when this legislation is passed, the s.e.c. still will have significant authority, it will still have its enforcement division, it will still have its new asset management unit which it has recently recruited industry professions with -- professionals with experience to do investigations the gentleman wants to have continued and it will continue, even after the passage of this legislation. and so with that said, i want to again thank the chairman and thank the gentleman from virginia, mr. hurt, and also the gentleman from connecticut, mr. himes, as well for their hard work on this very important legislation, as well as all of our co-sponsors on both sides of the aisle.
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and so with that i'm pleased to support h.r. 1105 and do make no mistake about it, this is bipartisan legislation. and it is all about helping small businesses and helping to create more jobs in this country. today more man 17,700 companies backed by private equity employ over 7.5 million people. my home state of new jersey alone, 597 private equity-backed companies support more than 377,000 workers. while the new jersey division of pension benefits has invested billions on behalf of retirees in private equity firms, hoping all those facts give you the facts you need to know, how much is important to the creation of jobs. and yet, despite their long track record of supporting small business nationwide, the dodd-frank act has imposed enormous, innumerous burdens on private equity firms, funding most fund advisors to -- forcing most fund advisors to spend millions of dollars on reporting requirements.
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so these burdensome regulations no doubt crimp the flow of what is much needed investment dollars to america's small businesses. and so there's little or no evidence that they are needed to promote the stability of our financial system or to protect investors. so, unlike, say, federal housing policy and the government-sponsored enterprises like fannie mae and freddie mac, private equity did not cause the financial crisis and is not and never has been a source of systemic risk. as former s.e.c. chair mary shapiro admitted back in 2011, she said, private equity funds have less potential to pose systemic risk than any other type of private funds. indeed, if the s.e.c. is so concerned about the systemic risk of private equity funds, their recent examinations of private equity advisors certainly don't show it. as chair white recently said, neither the s.e.c. examination staff nor the division of investment management, quote, has conducted examinations of advisors to private funds based
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primary on -- primarily on systemic risk. he also said, s.e.c. examiners have quote, not to date risks. thirdly, none of the advisors to private funds that withdrew their registration had systemic risk in the marketplace. and so now we must ask ourselves this question. do we really want the s.e.c., already saddled with a multitude of unfinished, nongermane dodd-frank mandates, expending valuable resources on risks that don't even exist? in addition, because only sophisticated investors may invest in these private equity funds, the need, if you think about it, to protect investers in this case is more limited compared to other areas of the security market. so, while i whole heartedly support the s.e.c.'s mission to protect investors, the agency with limited resources should be devoted first and foremost to protecting the less sophisticated, the retail mom and pop investors. they need the most protection.
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it was paul who was back in congress when dodd-frank went through, he said, i for one could care less about high-wealth individuals who want to contribute trare un-- their money to a group of investors. if they want to take the shot of losing it, it does not really affect the rest of society. and it also bares mentioning that this legislation -- bear mentioning that this legislation no no way alters he tool the s.e.c. has for investigating. and with that i urge support of h.r. 1105, at a time when most small businesses continue to have difficulty getting credit, and need to grow, passing this bipartisan legislation, commonsense legislation, should be a no-brainer. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: i yield myself just one minute to respond to soom of these allegations -- some of these allegations. with respect to sophisticated investors. the council of institutional investors which is an association representing corporate, union and public pensions, foundations and
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endowments, largely very sophisticated investors, with combined assets of $3 trillion, opposed this bill. they opposed this bill because the record of enforcement actions of the s.e.c. to go after risks that do actually exist. with that i yield three minutes to mr. himes of connecticut, a co-sponsor of the bill. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from connecticut is recognized for three minutes. mr. himes: thank you, mr. speaker. i'd like to thank my friend from massachusetts for the time. and ranking member waters for being willing to hear different perspectives on this bill from our side. and i want to start by saying that dodd-frank, which i think i can say i contributed more than my share to, was on balance a very good and very important thing. the dragging of drisktives into the light of day, trading on exchanges, clearing through clearing houses, the creation of the cfpb, taking steps to
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eliminate too big to fail, there's lots of stuff in dodd-frank which is important and good. but not everything in dodd-frank is important and good. like all other works of mortals, there are things in this that are probably unintended and perhaps overreaching. i happen to believe that the requirement that private equity funds register with the s.e.c. is one of those areas. why is that? first, private equity funds, as has been pointed out on the floor today, weren't a million miles from the bad mortgages, from fannie mae and freddie mac, from the subprime mortgages, from all of those things that caused the failures in 2008. they weren't anywhere close. secondly, investor protection is important. but by law, the only people who can invest in these funds are accredited investors or institutional investors. who don't just sign up. they hire attorneys to negotiate partnership agreements. they negotiate with these private equity funds for disclosure, for the terms, and
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all of those sorts of things. we're not talking about retail investors here. finally, the issue of leverage. we have finally gotten to the point where people acknowledge that these are not large leverage funds. and the point is made that the leverage is at the investment company level. that is true. private equity firms do buy companies, invest in them, and then those companies take on leverage. the average leverage across the entire universe of private equity-sponsored companies is less than 3-1. not 30-1. 3-1. less than 3-1. by way of comparison, hedge funds on average are leveraged 15-1. lehman brothers when it went down, was leveraged in excess of 30-1. we're talking about companies which are assuming the same kind of debt that any other small business assumes out there, less than 3-1. what we have happening right now is we have examiners and the intention and the resources of the s.e.c., which has
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terribly important missions around real estate and mortgages and derivatives and finding the next bernie may doff, going to -- may doff, going to $175 million funds, and examining these funds on behalf of sophisticated investors. that does not make sense. dodd-frank exempted venture capital funds from this registration requirement. venture capital funds do the exact same thing with the exact same invests that are private equity funds do, they just do it at an earlier stage in the company's history. the only reason for that exemption is that we like venture capital funds more than we like private equity funds. they sound better, they make nice things in garages in palow alto. private equity sounds more ominous and therefore they have been subjected to registration. may i have another 30 seconds? mr. lynch: give the gentleman another minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for an additional one minute. mr. himes: thank you.
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we exempted venture capital funds from 40 act registration. same set of investors, same types of investing. actually, a more risky asset class than private equity. we exempted them for no other reason than that we like venture capital better than we like private equity. that's fine. but in statute and in regulation, we should be consistent. so i think you can argue that venture capitalists should be subject to the same kind of registration requirements the private equity is or you can argue as i do that probably both types of funds don't need to be registered under 1940. but you can't support dodd-frank and say venture capitalists are exempt but private equity is not, and be consistent in policy. so i would urge my colleagues to in the interest of balancing a very good piece of legislation, to support 1105 and i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i now am pleased to yield two minutes to the gentleman from illinois, mr. hultgren. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from illinois is
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recognized for two minutes. mr. hultgren: thank you, mr. speaker. thank you, chairman hensarling. here e are trying to do today is to get small business jobs growing again and private equity helps do that. the infusion of private investment helps these small businesses create jobs. so we can get the economy moving again. over the last 15 years, private capital has helped about 23,000 small businesses, employing approximately three million people. businesses backed by private capital grew jobs 3.5 times faster than other businesses. we need to encourage this kind of growth by bringing more opportunity, not more regulation. capital is better spent getting people back to work in growing our small businesses than it is tied up in compliance costs. in illinois in my state more than $2 billion has been invested. private equity is about skin in the game and we need to keep these resources in the economy, not on the sidelines. i ask my colleagues to support
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h.r. 1105. i'm a proud co-sponsor and believe we should pass this important bill and i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: may i ask how much time is remaining for each side? the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts has 16 3/4 minutes remaining. the gentleman from texas has 12 remaining. mr. lynch: at this time i three minutes to the gentleman from tennessee, mr. cooper. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from tennessee is recognized for three minutes. mr. cooper: i thank the gentleman for yielding and it's a pleasure to serve with you. it's also a pleasure to support this bill. i want to address my remarks particularly to the new democrats and blue dog democrats because not everyone in this body is an expert on private equity or venture capital. this sounds like a complicated topic. it sounds technical but it's really all about jobs. there's nothing we can ask more back home than about creating jobs. there's nothing more we talk
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about here than creating jobs. passing this bill is a good way to do that. it's easy to get wound up in the details but the bottom line is this -- private equity creates job. these are funds who have wealthy investors investing in them and they lend their money, -- in companies and create jobs. they've created some 17,000 individual companies. these are the companies we try to recruit to our districts. these are the companies that we try to grow back home so more of our good people back home can have good jobs. the paperwork requirement that unfortunately -- and i think probably inadvertently that was put on them by the dodd-frank bill needs to be removed. s.e.c. registration is not appropriate for these funds. it costs between 3/4 of a
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million dollars and $1 million for this paperwork. that's money that's embalmed in red tape. so this is a chance -- and we do need to make sure there is a senate companion when this bill passes the house. i'm proud to be part of a job creation effort. people that understand venture capital and private equity knows this is a great way to help create more jobs in this country. by removing a little bit of the red tape that probably shouldn't have been there to begin with, you know, this bill passed the financial services committee last session of congress by voice vote. by voice vote. this shouldn't be controversial. this year the vote was overwhelming, 38-18. so i hope my colleagues, particularly among new democrats and blue dogs, will understand this is a job-creation issue, this is a bipartisan job-creation opportunity. 105 should pass overwhelmingly
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bipartisan support. let's get this over to the senate and i thank the chairman for yielding time and i hope my colleagues will vote for 1105. thank you. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i now yield a minute and a half to the gentlelady from missouri, mrs. wagner. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from missouri is recognized for 1 1/2 minutes. mrs. wagner: thank you, mr. speaker. i want to thank chairman hensarling of the financial services committee and also the gentleman from virginia, my friend, mr. hurt, for their very hard work in bringing this important legislation to the floor today. mr. speaker, today i rise in support of h.r. 1105, the small business capital access and job preservation act. this legislation addresses yet another misguided provision of the dodd-frank act that will help ensure that private equity maintains its critical role in our economy. private equity firms provide capital to main street businesses in missouri and all across our country. importantly, private equity often invests in companies when
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others are unwilling to do so. these investments support nearly 18,000 businesses in the united states that employ some 7 1/2 million workers. unfortunately, the dodd-frank act seeks to make it more difficult for private equity to maintain this important economic role. to my knowledge, no evidence has been produced which shows that private equity was a cause of the 2008 financial crisis or that it presents a systemic risk to our financial system. it makes sense, little sense then to impose unnecessary and costly red tape burdens on private equity investors which will only make it more difficult for them to invest in american businesses and create jobs. h.r. 1105 is therefore a necessary response to an overreach of the dodd-frank act and will help support main street businesses and jobs all throughout our country. i am pleased to support this very bipartisan bill and urge
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my colleagues to vote in support of h.r. 1105. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: i yield myself such time as i may consume. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. lynch: i do want to point out in response to the gentleman from tennessee's remarks about this bill going on voice vote in committee. i just want to remind the members and the public that during that debate, there was a need for further work on this bill. i think in a moment of bipartisanship we agreed, both democrats and republicans, to agree to go by voice vote to promise to work on some of those issues going forward. so it was an agreement to try to continue to agree and work on the bill. favor of a vote in any particular provisions in this bill. there's been a lot of talk here about the risk that don't exist, and i do want to point
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out some of those. as a result of this bill, more than -- funds investing more than $300 billion a year, much of which is the retirement savings of workers like teachers, firefighters, police officers, they would no longer be required to provide basic investor protections. specifically, h.r. 1105 would deprive investors of basic disclosures about an employee of a fund advisor who, for instance, violated securities law. the advisor's business practices, its fees, any conflict of interest on the part of that advisor. it would also eliminate a compliance program and code of ethics within the bill, within dodd-frank, and would eliminate the need for a chief compliance officer for each fund manager. h.r. 1105, the bill under consideration here, would also prevent the s.e.c. from conducting compliance examines
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of private equity funds advisors even though s.e.c. chairman white notes that the commission has already uncovered issues such as unlawful pay to play schemes, insider trading, that we all read about recently, conflicts of interest, valuation issues and misappropriation of assets. i want to talk about some of these. since there's been a complete dismissal of any risk here, i think the record speaks to the risk. the s.e.c. has brought several enforcement actions against private equity firms while they don't represent all private equity firms, they do highlight the need for a strong police officer with the authority to examine all private equity advisors. capital formation relies on investor confidence and the -- in the underlying assets. without registering with the s.e.c., they will no longer have a cop on the beat that will reduce investor demand.
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for example here, there have been broad violations related to fraud, custody, compliance and reporting. in a management group, the s.e.c. found that registered private equity funds, mehlman asset group, l.l.c., and another chief executive and former c.o.o., violated the anti-fraud, compliance, reporting and books and records provisions. an insider trader enforcement. the trading case involved an individual who lemmedly stole confidential acquisition information from his employer, s.p.g. capital, and sold that information to two friends who made $500,000 in illicit trading profits. valuation related enforcement a ons, the arpenhiemer has portfolio manager that misrepresented details of his
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valuation methodology to his investors. recently, the commission filed a case against yorkville advisors where yorkville allegedly inflated the values of certain liquid assets. while yorkville managed hedge funds, the valuation issues are ones that we see in private equity. finally, kcap, valuation case involving alleged overstatements of debt securities and c.l.o.'s held in the investment portfolio, a.m.u.'s emphasis on pursuing valuation cases. in another case, the s.e.c. found that an investment manager knowingly used a sanction under registered broker-dealer to solicit capital for a pooled investment vehicle. so all of these illegal activities would be made unavailable to private equity investors under this bill. that's what the risk is. that's not fiction. those are actual cases that the
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s.e.c. has introduced enforcement actions on. so there is real risk here for investors. and for the markets themselves. and with that i yield -- i actually reserve the balance of our time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time is reserved. the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: i yield myself 30 seconds, mr. speaker, to say that the gentleman from massachusetts sets up a straw man and then knocks it down. what he calls things illegal continues to be illegal. and i would say the private equity funds has extensive reporting to investors, including annual audited statements, private equity advisors are subjected to the anti-fraud provisions of the advisors act of 1940. and part of the securities act of 1933. the real choice becomes, are we going to get even greater
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protections for millionaire investors or help struggling single moms trying to find a job in this economy? mr. speaker, i am happy to yield two minutes to the gentleman from ohio, mr. stivers. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from ohio is recognized for two minutes. mr. stivers: thank you, mr. speaker. i'd like to thank the gentleman from texas for yielding time. the small business capital access and job preservation act is an important bill that i believe will allow more capital to go and flow to small business so they can create jobs. you know, at a time when we have 7.3% unemployment and underemployment over 10%, we have a need for more capital to flow into our businesses so they can create jobs. meanwhile, the dodd-frank act created burdensome new s.e.c. registration on private equity firms but as the gentleman from connecticut said earlier, not on venture capital firms that do exactly the same thing.
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so in fact, i would argue that venture capital firms have more risk than private equity. there already are important protections, consumer protections around private equity. you have to be a sophisticated, accredited investor and there's already important fraud detection and fraud enforcement actions that are available to the s.e.c. in the cases of these investors being taken advantage of. so at a time when private equity is helping provide over six million jobs in america, we should be doing everything we can to actually encourage more activity by private equity to encourage more jobs in america, not burdening them with big regulations. and i want to just make four quick points. these middle market private equity firms, like we have in towns like columbus, ohio, where i live, contributed a lot toward job creation but not a lot towards systemic risk.
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and the compliance costs for these smaller firms in towns like columbus, ohio, will be especially high as a percentage that it could drive many of them out of business. many of these firms that manage both sbic and non-sbic funds already face multiple layers of regulation, and the fourth point is, many of these investment advisor rules are not really perntnent to private equity funds. so i -- pertinent to private equity funds. of this in approval legislation. i think it's a win for job creation. and i urge all my colleagues to support it. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: i yield myself a couple minutes here to -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for two minutes. mr. lynch: thank you. we need not worry about small firms in this. they're already exempt under this bill. they're already exempt.
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so concerns about small firms being covered by this -- they're already exempt, number one. number two, the other assumption or the other scenario that's been said here allowing -- by allowing private equity firms the right to keep secret -- to refuse to disclose that their employees have been prosecuted for violating securities laws, by allowing that to remain undisclosed, that's going to help some single mom go to work. i don't think that is a rational assumption. i have a bunch of stuff here i have to submit for the record but thank you. i'd like unanimous consent into enter into the record letters
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from the following organizations, all opposed to this bill. one, the americans for financial reform, a letter from e afl-cio, a letter from the california public employees retirement system, a letter from the consumer federation of america, a letter from the council of institutional investors, a letter from the north american securities administration association, and a statement of the administration policy from the obama administration. i ask unanimous consent that they be entered into the record. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. lynch: and i ask to reserve our time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time is reserved. the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i'm very pleased now to yield one minute to the gentleman from tennessee, mr. fincher. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from tennessee is recognized for one minute. mr. fincher: thank you, mr. chairman, for yielding. mr. speaker, strong job creation is the foundation for health a healthy economy, while overregulation kills jobs. private equity provides much-needed capital and better investment returns to pension
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plans, university endowments, foundations and other investors than if they simply deposited their money in a bank. the various forms of capital provided by private equity in our economy result in more resources for companies to operate their firms, expand their facilities and create more jobs. h.r. 1105 sponsor d 1105, sponsored by mr. hurt, would help expand private equity by relievinging certain advisors to private equity funds from the burdensome and unnecessary process of registering with the s.e.c. this bill would simply allow investors -- excuse me, allow advisors and private equity firms to do what they do best, invest in promising companies in order to help them expand and create more jobs. let's support job growth in this country by voting in favor of h.r. 1105. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: can i ask how much time is remaining on each side? the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts has 7 3/4 minutes remaining.
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the gentleman from texas has 7 1/2. mr. lynch: i'd like to yield two minutes to the gentlelady from new york, mrs. maloney. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from new york is recognized for two minutes. mrs. maloney: i thank the gentleman for yielding and i would like to remind my colleagues that we are still recovering from a massive financial crisis that cost this country $16 trillion. and i would venture to say that we should be more focused on protecting investors, not removing investor protections. and i would say that all investors deserve to be protected. sophisticated investors, retail investors, pension investors. all investors should be protected. which is why the obama administration has come out so strongly in opposition to the underlying bill. and why the securities and
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exchange commission, whose mission is to protect investors, is so adamantly, strongly opposed to this bill. now, i am sympathetic to the point that my colleagues have raised on the other side of the aisle and on this side of the aisle. that some of the reporting and registration requirements are onerous. so let's address that. let's direct the s.e.c. to come forward with simplified forms. to do it quickly, within six months. let's save money. let's simplify the process. but let's not remove important investor protections. uch as the fiduciary duty to act in the client's best interest. what's wrong with that? i think that's a moral responsibility. such as the obligation to disclose conflicts of interest. now, that's not onerous.
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how difficult is it to say, yes or no? i have not had any conflict of interest, or if you are advising your client to invest in your business, then disclose your conflict of interest. what's so onerous about that? that's not onerous. that's easy. and what's wrong with the obligation to disclose fees? everyone talks about transparency. that is why we are opposing this bill, we wanted to be transparent, and we want to protect investors. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is recognized for an additional one minute. mrs. maloney: i feel that there are many ways that we could address this that would come forward with a strong piece of legislation that president obama could sign into law. instead he's got a lot of ink in his veto pen and he has said right out front he will veto this bill. now, if they want to simplify disclosure and registration requirements, then let's do that. let's require the s.e.c. to
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come forward with it. let's simplify the process and save the cost for small businesses. we want to save that cost. and honest, private equity firms have grown jobs in this country and it's important to grow jobs, it's important to support them and -- in every single way. but by removing all investor protection, according to the obama administration, would literally assault the safety and soundness and the strong financial security that we are trying to build in this country. what's wrong with protecting investors? that's what we're saying. i have an amendment which would do just that. protect the investors, but simplify the forms and maintain the cost. if their goal is to save the money for the small firms, then let's do that. but let's not erase very important investor protections in the process. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. the gentleman from texas.
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mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i yield myself one minute. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. hensarling: again, i want to address the gentleman from massachusetts who again i believe sets up a strawman only to knock it down. i would urge all members to actually read the bill. i know that many of my democratic colleagues now have buyer's remorse from not reading the 2,000-page obamacare bill. but, mr. speaker, this is a two-page bill. 36 lines. and i would say to my friend, the gentleman from massachusetts, that on page 2, that the s.e.c. can, quote, require investment advisors described in paragraph 1 to maintain such records and provide to the commission such annual or other reports, as the commission taking into account, fun-sized, governments -- fund size, governments, and other
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things necessary. to make the assertion that these records of foul play could never exist is simply not true. i would say to my friend, the gentlelady from new york, who made the assertion that the s.e.c. has opposed this bill, i yield myself an additional 30 seconds. the s.e.c. has not opposed this bill. one member, one member, mary jo white, has issued an opinion that she does not support the legislation, but the s.e.c. has taken no official position. with respect to a threatened veto, i don't recall that when my democratic colleagues had the majority here that they refused to pass bills simply because president bush threatened to veto, but i must admit, our committee has produced i believe it is at least 10 or 11 bipartisan bills , all receiving veto threats from a president who says he wants to work on a bipartisan basis. this is most regrettable. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from massachusetts. mr. lynch: thank you. i yield myself two minutes.
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the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. lynch: no? well, i have to re-enter -- there was a problem with submitting some documents for unanimous consent. i'd like to unanimous consent to enter into the record for the following organizations, 1105, the ppose h.r. afl-cio, california public employees' retirement system, and north american securities administration. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. lynch: and regarding reading the bill, i certainly did read the bill. and my point is that the bill does not require public disclosure of those matters as the gentleman points out. it just goes to the commission. so it doesn't go to the public, the public doesn't get the information, it stays within the custody of the commission. that's my point. sure i will. mr. hensarling: by definition,
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it's private equity. it is not a public fund. mr. lynch: right. but those are public investors. they're the ones that need the information. mr. speaker, i'd like to yield the balance of our time to the gentlelady from california, ms. waters, our ranking member and a real champion of america's working families. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady from california is recognized for the balance of the time which is 3 3/4 minutes. ms. waters: thank you very much. i'd like to thank the gentleman from massachusetts for managing in my absence. i'm pleased to have the opportunity to come back to the floor to add a few comments. prior to leaving, the chairman of this committee talked about this being a job-creation bill. he wrapped this bill in job creation. and i must say that i don't think that the gentleman had much else he could say about why they're trying to exempt all of these private equity funds from registering with the s.e.c. wrapping it in this notion of
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creating all of these jobs and we should all be very appreciative is one way to deflect attention from the fact that here we have private from funds, $180 million the smaller private equity funds have been exempted already. those firms that have $180 million in those funds are already exempted. that was done in the dodd-frank legislation. now they're coming back and they're saying, exempt everybody. what is it you're trying to hide? why is it you do not want these firms to register? well, first of all, they are registered at this point. the s.e.c. is given the oversight and the regulation that they need and they're finding that it is very important for them to do so because they're finding that there are unlawful play-to-pay schemes, insider trading and
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misappropriation of assets, etc., etc. that's not to say that all private equity funds are doing these things. but weeding out the bad apples is extremely important. the s.e.c. is our cop on the block. they're there to protect the investors. this is their number one responsibility. and we want them to do this. ust as you have calpers from california that's against this bill, they should be against this bill. they have the retirement funds of policemen and firemen and all of the middle class people that make up the basis of this economy. well, lets me just add to the ones that were mentioned by my friend from massachusetts. we also have americans for financial reform, we also have the consumer federation and all of the state regulators who are against this bill, and the president's advisors have said they're recommending a veto. what do you have to hide? why don't you want registration? that's the question that must be asked. that's the question that has
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really not been answered. and, mr. speaker, members, i would ask for a no vote on this bill, because we endanger the investors that they claim they want to protect, because they claim they want them to produce all of these jobs. and certainly that will never happen if we allow the kind of situations to continue to happen, that are described under the discussion about capital in the presidential elections debates. do i still have time, mr. chairman? the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady remains to be recognized. yes. ms. waters: thank you very much. now, further, let me just say, that we have worked very, very rd to try and make sure that we have protection, that is the role of the s.e.c., and again they are already -- they already have these registered private equity firms that they are taking a look at and they're learning things about
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them and this information will be used to make sure that we have the kind of private equity funds that can do the kind of jobs that we want them to do. yes, we appreciate investment. yes, we want job creation. but why should we have private equity funds that somehow have no oversight? that don't have anybody scrutinizing what they're doing? why is it we don't want any regulatory agencies looking at them? that just doesn't make good sense. and i would say to my friends, you have to oppose this bill. there will be an amendment coming up, that was mentioned by mrs. maloney, that makes good sense. and if they had gone to that simply as a way of trying to help out in this area, they could have gotten a lot of support. but they stepped way over the line. when they say, no oversight, no scrutiny by the s.e.c. or anybody else. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: i'm happy to yield two minutes to the
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gentleman from new jersey, again, a co-author of the legislation, and the chairman of our capital markets and g.s.e. subcommittee. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from new jersey is recognized for two minutes. mr. garrett: thank you. let's step back for a moment and see where we may agree on certain points. i guess at the 30,000-foot level we agree we want to work together on legislation that will try to prevent the next financial crisis we agree that we want to try to protect investors. it's after that level, however, and getting into the details, that we disagree. as far as protecting and try to make sure the next financial crisis does not occur, there has been no evidence either today on the floor or in the committee process during the discussion of this debate, or in any of the debates when we discuss dodd-frank, that the origin of the last financial crisis was from private equity, no evidence. or from hedge funds. no evidence. or from venture capital. no evidence whatsoever. so to say that we need to have extensive overbearing, overlapping, extraneous
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regulations on private equity, to prevent the next one, they have no evidence to say that that was the cause in the past. so we say, just as the gentleman from connecticut said before, venture capital was excluded from it, why not private equity as well? that's why we have come together in a bipartisan manner to make sure the next crisis doesn't occur in an area such as this. the second point of area was made as far as cost. the gentleman from massachusetts says, well, we're talking about the larger funds here. if he was at the hearing last night on rules committee, he would have heard one of his colleagues, mr. poll friss -- polis from colorado, refute that point. why is that? because when you're talking about firms, this is what he said last night, really interesting, when you're talking about firms, $150 million, $200 million, sounds like large firms, right? but that's just how much money is under management. the actual profits, the actual money that they're spending in the company is just a fraction of it. a little tiny fraction, as he pointed out, around 2%.
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so if you're talking about $150 million fund under management, sounds big, actually you're talking about around a $3 million business and now you're asking that $3 million to have to pay upwards to a half a million dollars each year for all their compliance costs and the examination which goes to the last point by the entlelady from new york. we'd like to find common ground on her amendment. the initial filing of the forms and what have you. after that there's the extraneous additional examinations and all the other costs that is so overly burdensome, that we have found both in a bipartisan manner, as mr. himes from connecticut already pointed out, is overly burdensome and unnecessary. if there was some other way to pull this together on a bipartisan amendment, more than already have, i would gladly do so. i'm goodlatte the gentleman from virginia and also the gentleman from connecticut have
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been able to come together on all the points to come to a final bill in a bipartisan manner and i support the legislation. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas with 3 1/2 minutes remaining. mr. hensarling: thank you, mr. speaker. i yield myself such time as i may consume. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. hensarling: you know, mr. speaker, listening to some of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle, it's hard not to conclude that some of them have never met a regulation that they didn't like. regardless of what it does to the hopes, dreams, aspirations of the unemployed and underemployed in america. as i look over at your chair, mr. speaker, and i see the words, "in god we trust," i sometimes question whether some members would like to take down the word "god" and replace it with regulators, "in regulators we trust."
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the question hasn't been, mr. speaker, the question between regulation and deregulation, the question is between smart regulation and dumb regulation. and in order to make that determination, one needs to see what cost is being imposed again on the hopes and dreams and aspirations of the unemployed and the underemployed. why does this underlying regulation need to be there in the first place? is it systemic risk? well, even the chairman of the s.e.c. has admitted that private equity played no role in the financial crisis. we know in terms of the economy, private equity may represent somewhere in the world of 1.5% to 2% of g.d.p. there's no evidence of interconnectedness, which many maintain is at the root of systemic risk. so what are they trying to protect? well, investor protection, this
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is all about giving additional protection to millionaire investors at the expense of single moms trying to make ends meet. i'm not really sure that meets the test of smart regulation. and we know already that private equity fund advisors are subject, as they well should be, to the anti-prod provisions of the investors act of 1940. the securities act of 1933. the s.e.c. still has the ability to ensure that proper documentation is maintained. no, we do not want to see any investor, regardless of sophistication or income, be subject to coercion or fraud but at the same time we don't want to deny small businesses the job engine in america the funding they need to put
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america back to work. there are many companies today that we recognize. skype, oughnuts, petco, j. crew, that have benefited from private equity. where would the hundreds of thousands of jobs they represent be today if private equity had to face yet another burden that's going to cause these small investment firms half a million dollars, a million dollars? now, today we really haven't heard that much of international smart comp but maybe they are tomorrow's petco, tomorrow's toys r us. so it really comes down to us, mr. speaker. again, are there going to be additional protections for multimillionaire investors or protections and opportunities for unemployed, single moms trying to make ends meet? our side of the aisle said let's help the single mom,
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let's pass h.r. 1105 and put america back to work. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. all time for debate has expired. for what purpose does the gentlelady from new york seek recognition? mrs. maloney: i have an amendment at the desk. the speaker pro tempore: the clerk will designate the amendment. the clerk: amendment number 1 printed in part b of house report 113-283 offered by ms. carolyn b. maloney of new york. the speaker pro tempore: pursuant to house resolution 429, the gentlelady from new york, mrs. maloney, and a member opposed, each will control five minutes. the chair recognizes the gentlelady from new york. mrs. maloney: i thank the chair and i first want to commend the chairman and the ranking member for their hard and dedicated work on the financial services committee. i'd also like to commend the vice chairman, mr. hurt, congressman hurt for his work on this bill. and i agree with him that private equity funds did not cause the financial crisis. and i also agree that many
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private equity funds and especially the small private equity funds invest in middle market businesses that support jobs across our country. i also agree for many small equity funds, the cost of complying with every single requirement in the investor advisory act can be burdensome and costly. however, while i share the goal of reducing unnecessary regulatory burdens on small private equity funds with under $1 billion in assets, i believe there are better ways to accomplish this goal, to reduce the burden, to reduce costs ithout eliminating important investor protection. and i say we should have equality in this country and equality of treatment to everyone, including investors. if you're a small investor, a large investor, a teacher,
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unemployed worker and you've invested, whoever you are, you should have protections. aren't we a country of laws and equality of treatment? so my amendment would direct the s.e.c. to create a simplified disclosure form for fund advisors between $150 million and $1 billion while also retaining important investor protections. so we would reduce the burden, reduce the reporting, reduce the disclosure, simplify the forms, make it easier but protect the fiduciary duty to act on a client's best interest. isn't that the moral, right thing to do? the disclosure of conflicts of interest and the obligation to disclose fees. i thought we all supported transparency. but let's have transparency in these investment funds too.
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now, i would ask my colleagues on the other side of the aisle who are objecting to this amendment, how much of a burden is it to disclose whether or not you have a conflict of interest? you just have to check yes or no, i have a conflict of interest. maybe you have to disclose what that conflict is, but that's the fair and right thing to do. how burdensome is it to disclose fees? tell people what you're charging them and how burdensome is it to have the really necessary if i dishary duty to -- fiduciary duty to act in the client's best interest. many people think you're acting in their best interest. i think they would be horrified to know that some members of this body want to roll back that protection for them. i would also like to note that in august, the s.e.c. did provide relief for smaller private equity funds from what the industry tells me is one of
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the most burdensome aspects of registration. the so-called custody rule which requires that the funds use independent custodians for stocks that don't even trade. so private equity funds have already gotten relief, and i applaud the s.e.c. for this commonsense decision. the reforms in my amendment would build on this relief and would direct the s.e.c. to act quickly on simplified forms within six months and save these small businesses money so that money can go out into the community. the underlying bill grants a complete exemption to private equity fund advisors with under 2:1 leverage which is pretty much the entire industry, because the funds themselves are not leveraged, it's the
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companies the funds invest in hat are leveraged. the prime mission is to protect investors and by president obama's administration and he's even threatened a veto. if the problem is the high cost of registering at the s.e.c. and preparing for disclosures, then it is to simplify the disclosures for small equity funds. that's what my bill does, but it also protects investors. it does not exempt the entire industry from investor otection which is what the underlying bill does. and i do not believe that that is the intent of my colleagues on ear side of the aisle. so my -- on either side of the aisle. so my amendment has the expressed goal of saving money, simplifying but protects the integrity of our system and
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investors. so i would like to yield -- i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. mrs. maloney: i urge everyone to support my amendment. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from texas seek recognition? mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, i rise in opposition to claim the time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for five minutes. mr. hensarling: i yield myself such time as i may consume. mr. speaker, the amendment, regardless of how well-intentioned it may be, functionally guts the bill and is essentially redundant of current law in dodd-frank. perhaps, and i certainly grant the gentlelady who is a very senior and thoughtful member of this committee that her amendment is more articulate than the underlying law, but section 408 in -- of dodd-frank already says, quote, in prescribing regulations to carry out the requirements of this section, with respect to investment advisors acting as investment advisors to mid sized private funds, the commission shall take into
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account the size, governance, investment strategy of such funds. it goes on to say, the commission shall provide for registration, examination procedures with respect to the investment advisors of such funds which reflect the level of systemic risk. so, again, it is essentially redundant of what is already in current law, but according to the private equity growth council, on average it is taking $1.8 million for the initial dodd-frank compliant $1.3 d additional million each year in dodd-frank compliant cost all for what? all for what? we already have underlying investor protections in place. no evidence, no evidence presented whatsoever that this has anything to do with systemic risk. all at the cost of jobs at a time when again, mr. speaker, tens of millions of our
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countrymen are struggling, underemployed, unemployed. again, who are we going to help? are we going to help regulators? are we going to help millionaire investors? are we going to help struggling americans trying to pay the bills? and so we should oppose this amendment, mr. speaker. at this time i'd have been happy to yield two minutes to the gentleman from virginia, mr. hurt, again, the author of h.r. 1105. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from virginia is recognized for two minutes. mr. hurt: thank you. i rise in opposition to the gentlelady's amendment. i appreciate her work and interest on this important issue but with all due respect, this amendment would defeat the entire purpose of the bill. if adopted, all advisors to private equity that are currently undergoing the burdensome and unnecessary registration process would still be required to do so. additionally, it would establish an entirely subject so-called simplified compliance standard that would have to be defined by the securities and exchange commission. there's no reason to believe that such a so-called
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simplified standard would provide any meaningful relief for those private equity companies investing in small companies across this country. as has been stated, small and midsized private equity firms are expending hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual compliance costs and would still have to be registered with the s.e.c. instead of addressing this problem, this amendment if adopted would continue to restrict the ability of small and midsized equity firms to invest in small business. as members have pointed out, they are not good arguments that they provide systemic risk. and we have already adopted a standard proposed by mr. himes in committee that would require registration for advisors to firms with leverage that exceeds 2-1. i know that the gentlelady understands that access to private capital is the lifeblood for small business. the current s.e.c. registration requirements are unnecessary, they produce significant burden on private equity firms and therefore restrict the flow of private capital to small
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businesses across the country. i urge this body to defeat this amendment and vote in favor of the underlying bill. thank you, mr. speaker, and i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas. mr. hensarling: mr. speaker, how much time do i have remaining? the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from texas has one minute and 30 seconds remaining. mr. hensarling: i'll yield myself the balance of the time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. hensarling: thank you, mr. speaker. again, private equity historically has invested in tens of thousands of small businesses, helped create millions of jobs in america, and the question is today, are we going to put a road block, a road block in place of private equity, the small business investment engines, so that we can somehow help regulators, and with all due respect to our regulators, and there are many good ones, many great ones at the s.e.c., but i've never met a regulator who turned down the opportunity to regulate more. i've never met them.
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and so the question is, are we going to grant even greater ability to take funds away from small businesses to create a work product that doesn't meet the commonsense test, the jobs test, the smell test, or any other test at a time when people are still suffering and wondering how are they going to put gas in the tank, how are they going to take their kids to school, how are they going to afford their health care bills, since clearly they cannot keep their health insurance even if they want to, how are they going to do this? we need private equity to fund small business, to get america back to work. we need to defeat this amendment, we need to pass the underlying bill. it is time to be projobs and with that, mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of our time.
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the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. all time for debate has expired. pursuant to the rule, the previous question is ordered on the bill as amended and on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from new york, mrs. maloney. the question is on the amendment by the gentlelady from new york, mrs. maloney. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair, the noes have it. the gentlelady from new york. mrs. maloney: i request a recorded vote. the speaker pro tempore: is the gentlelady asking for the yeas and nays? mrs. maloney: yes, i do demand the yeas and nays. the speaker pro tempore: the yeas and nays are requested. all those in favor of taking this vote by the yeas and nays will rise and remain standing until counted. a sufficient number having arisen, the yeas and nays are ordered. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a 15-minute vote. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for political or commercial purposes is expressly prohibited by the u.s. house of representatives.]
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the speaker pro tempore: on this vote the yeas are 186 and the nays are 225. thes remain -- the amendment is not adopted. without objection, a motion to reconsider is laid on the table. the question is on engrossment and third reading of the bill. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. the ayes have it. third reading. the clerk: a bill to amend the investment advisors act of 1940, to provide a registration exemption for private equity fund advisors and for other purposes. the speaker pro tempore: the ouse will be in order. he house will be in order.
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>> mr. speaker. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman rom nevada seek recognition? mr. horsford: mr. speaker, i have a motion to recommit at the desk. i am opposed in its current form iment the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman qualifies. the clerk will report the motion. the clerk: mr. horsford of nevada moves to recommit the bill, h.r. 1105, to the committee on financial services, with instructions to report the same back to the house forthwith, with the following amendment. page 2, line 17, strike the quotation marks and final period and insert after such line the following, 3, protecting american jobs, the exemmingts describes under paragraph -- the exemption described under paragraph 1 shall only apply to an invest, -- investment advisor giving advise to, a, --
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the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from virginia seek recognition? >> mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent that the motion be dispensed as read. the speaker pro tempore: is there objection? without objection, the reading is dispensed with. he house will be in order. pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from nevada is recognized for five minutes in support of his motion. mr. horsford: thank you, mr. speaker. this is the final amendment to the bill which will not kill the bill or send it back to committee, if adopted the bill will immediately proceed to final passage as amended. >> mr. speaker, the house is not in order. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is correct. he house will be in order. the gentleman may proceed.
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the gentleman may proceed. mr. horsford: the underlying bill would exempt almost every private equity fund from registration and reporting requirements under dodd-frank. it is another attempt by house republicans to turn back the clock on progress that we've ade to make sure wall street is helping main street. this bill, despite being titled the small business capital access and job preservation act, has nothing to do with small business or creating jobs. and everything to do with chipping away at the safeguards put in place when congress passed financial sector reform. wall street reform has made the financial system more transparent, reduced risk and protected against systemic failure. private equity fund advisors have been filing reports with the s.e.c. for over a year now.
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we shouldn't be trying to gut the system of accountability and oversight. we should be building it up. we should be working together to make the reforms work and make them stronger. mr. speaker, the house is not in order. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is correct. the house will be in order. members will please take their conversations off the floor. he house will be in order. the gentleman may proceed. mr. horsford: thank you, mr. speaker. h.r. 1105 would roll back the progress by providing blanket registration and reporting exemptions, seriously hamping oversight -- hampering oversight. the motion to recommit i am offering would amend the underlying bill so that investment funds are only eligible if they do not own a
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controlling interest in companies that outsource american jobs to other countries. we would also require reporting about any downsizing at each company owned and controlled by the fund. instead of decreasing transparency by wall street, we should be demanding greater public disclosure to protect consumers. we should not be encouraging outsourcing of american jobs overseas, we should be incentivizing companies to keep jobs right here in america and o bring them back. and we should not be encouraging downsizing or the elimination of jobs, but incentivizing companies to hire employees and to get the merican public back to work.
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now, when i go home to my district in nevada, and meet with constituents, they want to know what congress is doing to create jobs. mr. speaker -- >> mr. speaker, the house is not in order. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is correct. members will please take their conversations off the floor. he house will be in order. the gentleman may proceed. mr. horsford: when i go back to my district in nevada and meet with constituents, they want to know what congress is doing to create jobs. they aren't asking me to roll back reforms that make financial markets more stable. they aren't asking me to make life easier for wall street. they want this congress focused on one street, main street. and on creating middle class jobs to help grow the economy nd put americans back to work. and so it's telling that for this congress, that with so few
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legislative days remaining in this year, we are focused -- we have focused our precious time on private equity fund advisors. this bill focuses the attention of congress on the policy desires of an elite group that is doing just fine. they're asking for more secrecy. why? that's not what we should be spending our time on. instead of bringing an infrastructure bill to the floor that would create middle class jobs, instead of passing comprehensive immigration reform, mr. speaker, to fix our broken system and to grow the economy, instead of passing workplace protections that prevent americans from being fired because of who they love, instead of working to reduce food insecurity, instead of replacing the harmful sequester that is hurting everything from military contractors to economic activity for all
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americans, instead of doing any of that, of doing what the american people are demanding of this congress, the house g.o.p. through h.r. 1105 are focusing their energy on gutting wall street reform. >> mr. speaker, the house is not in order. the speaker pro tempore: the ouse will be in order. members will please take their conversations off the floor. the gentleman may proceed. mr. horsford: so we have serious business that this body could be focused on. business that many of our constituents on both sides of the aisle say they want us to address. but instead we have h.r. 1105, a focus to get wall street reform and it is a quiet but concerted effort to once again
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turn back the clock on the american people. not to mention the underlying -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. mr. horsford: is also a futile attempt because the president has already said that he would veto the legislation. i urge my colleagues to vote yes for the motion to recommit, to vote yes to put the american public back to work, to put the middle class agenda on the house of representatives and to do the people's business. t's get -- the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from virginia seek recognition? >> mr. speaker, i rise in opposition to the motion to recommit. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized for five minutes. >> thank you, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, the, with all due respect -- the speaker pro tempore: the house will come to order.
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the gentleman may proceed. mr. hurt: mr. speaker, the problem, with all drew respect, -- respect to the gentleman from nevada, the problem with his motion to recommit is that it would punish a company like viteman shop. viteman shop is a leading u.s.-based viteman and supplements distributor. earlier this year vite men shop went global, opening its first international franchise in panama city, panama. by parting with a private equity fund, they grew its business from a northeast-based specialty retailer to a national chain, adding more than 400 stores in 2,500 new jobs. with all due respect, this bill is not about overseas jobs, this bill is not about wall street. this bill is about main street american jobs. to the tune of $7.-- 7.5 million jobs working in 17,000 u.s. companies. this bill is about encouraging private capital investment in those main street jobs. this bill is about not adding
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$500,000 in compliance costs to a main street job creation. to put this in perspective, i daresay, of every congressional district represented on this floor, this bill is about a window manufacturing company in rocky mountain, virginia, in virginia's fifth district, our district, that has operated there for the last 70 years. it's provided good jobs in our community, it's provided jobs for generations of people living in franklin county, virginia, and for families who have worked there for generations. in the last 10 to 20 years, in rocky mountain, virginia, just like all across southside, virginia, and so many congressional districts across this country, we've seen hard times because the of the loss of thousands of manufacturing jobs. we have seen over the last 10, 20 years double-digit unemployment. this window manufacturing plant was able to survive because of a private equity investment and now that window manufacturing company boasts 1,000 employees. those jobs still exist today
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because of the private equity investment. last night we had a meeting at the rules committee and one member of the committee asked the question, he said, if a big p.e. firm has to pay an extra $500,000 for compliance costs, what's the big deal? it seems to me that it would be better perhaps to ask that question to an employee at that windows manufacturing firm in rocky mountain. if asked, i suspect he would say, you know, i have a good job, i love my job, i work 60 hours a week to be able to pay my mortgage, to pay my bills and take care of my family. he would say, please, please, all of you in washington, do everything that you can to make sure that one year from now, i still have my job and make sure that my neighbor has a job too. that is a big deal. i urge defeat of this motion to
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recommit, i urge adoption of this good job bill and i ask your vote for h.r. 1105 and i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the previous question is orered on the motion to recommit. the question is on the motion. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair the noes have it. the motion is not agreed to. >> mr. speaker, i request the yeas and nays. the speaker pro tempore: does the gentleman ask for a recorded vote? >> i ask for a recorded vote. the speaker pro tempore: a recorded vote is requested. those favoring a recorded vote will rise. a sufficient number having risen, a recorded vote is ordered. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a five-minute vote. pursuant to clause 9 of rule 20, the chair will reduce to five minutes the time for any vote on
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the question of passage. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for political or commercial purposes is expressly prohibited by the u.s. house of representatives.]
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the speaker pro tempore: on this vote, the yeas are 185, the nays are 227. the motion is not adopted. the question is on passage of to the bill. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no.
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he ayes have it. >> i ask for a recorded vote. the speaker pro tempore: a recorded vote is requested. those favoring a recorded vote will rise. a sufficient number having risen, a recorded vote is ordered. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a five-minute vote. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for political or commercial purposes is expressly prohibited by the u.s. house of representatives.]
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the speaker pro tempore: on this vote the yeas are 254 and the nays are 159. the bill is passed. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table. for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition? >> mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent that representative ruiz at his request be removed as a co-sponsor from my bill, h.r. 3313. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, so ordered. for what purpose does the gentleman from california rise?
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mr. lamalfa: i ask unanimous consent that when the house adjourns today it adjourn to meet at 9:00 a.m. tomorrow. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, so ordered. the speaker pro tempore: the chair lays before the house the
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following personal requests. the clerk: leaves of absences requested for mr. rush of illinois from december 2 december 5 and mr. gingrey for today and the balance of the week. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the requests are granted. the chair will now entertain requests for one-minute speeches. for what purpose does the gentleman from texas seek recognition? mr. poe: i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. poe: mr. speaker, the president has taken an oath to uphold the constitution, but this president has refused to follow and enforce certain laws. he doesn't enforce all immigration laws. he doesn't enforce the mandatory minimum punishments. work sn't enforce the requirements for welfare. he illegally changed obamacare by postponing implementation
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for big business, small business and individuals. and granting arbitrary waivers to special people. he unconstitutionally took america to war in libya. all of these actions are unilateral, unlawful and unconstitutional. the constitution requires the president to execute and enforce law, not create his own laws, ignore the rule of law. however, this president, the former constitutional law professor, seems to think the constitution is a mere suggestion and he will do as he pleases, and that's just the way it is. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition? i stand corrected. for what purpose does the gentlelady from ohio seek recognition?
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without objection, the gentlelady is recognized for one minute. mrs. beatty: thank you, mr. speaker. today i rise to pay tribute to a woman that's considered the modern mother of the civil rights movement, rosa parks. this past sunday, we celebrated the 58th anniversary of rosa parks refusing to give up her seat on that bus in montgomery, alabama. i am so proud to stand here from the great state of ohio because it was the great state of ohio that was the first state in this nation to name december 1 rosa parks day. on thursday and friday of this week in our district, we will bring people from all over the state to pay tribute to her. and we will bring in more than 600 little children who will learn about civil rights and understand the value of working together. the last day, 1955, she started
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something larger than herself. she stood -- she sat down so we could stand up. mr. speaker, it is my honor to be a part of the legislation that created december 1 in ohio as rosa parks day. thank you and i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady yields back. for what purpose does the gentleman from pennsylvania seek recognition? >> i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. medicare advantage provides quality coverage to many seniors in western pennsylvania. it is popular because it provides more options and increased care coordination. mr. rothfus: until 2011, seniors were able to make adjustments if the plan they chose did not meet their needs. unfortunately, the affordable re act eliminated this
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option. "the wall street journal" recently reported that the largest medicare advantage providers had dropped thousands of doctors from its network. as a result, seniors may be unsure about whether they need to switch plans to continue seeing their doctors when the current open enrollment period ends this saturday. this uncertainty underscores the importance of the medicare beneficiary preservation of choice act, h.r. 2453, which congressman kurt schrader and i introduced earlier this year. this restores seniors' freedom to try their plan and make changes. i thank my 13 democrat and republican colleagues to join me in advocating for our seniors and i encourage members on both sides of the aisle to support this common sense and bipartisan legislation. i thank the speaker and i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the chair thanks the gentleman. who seeks recognition? for what purpose does the gentleman from texas seek recognition?
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without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. veasey: mr. speaker, i rise before to talk about the fact that the congressional district that i represent has the highest uninsured rate out of any congressional district in the entire country, about 40% of the constituents i represent don't have health care insurance. i wanted to talk today about how the affordable care act is already helping many of those constituents in the very district that i represent. yesterday, i found out that a constituent who resides in the district i represent, jason roberts, had suffered from cancer and that he had been running out of options but when the affordable health care act kicked in, he found out that his cobra benefits would be saved. because of the options offered through the affordable care act, jason, who, again, had suffered from cancer, he actually dropped his monthly premiums by $251 and his
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deductible by $1,500. that's an overall savings of about $4,500 a year for what jason describes as great coverage. the simple fact that he and so many others are actually able to keep their insurance, even if they have a pre-existing condition, like jason had with cancer, is a true testament of the benefits of the health care law. let's work together to make sure that this health care law works for all americans, like jason, and that continues to work for all americans. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. for what purpose does the gentleman from colorado seek recognition? mr. coffman: mr. speaker, i request permission to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. coffman: thank you, mr. speaker. last month i was joined by my colleagues in sending a letter to secretary of state kerry to express concern about a potential interim agreement with iran. two weeks ago, such a deal was reached. it is a bad deal.
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the world rolls back sanctions without iran fully dismantling its nuclear weapons program. sanctions have impacted iran's economy, leading its people to elect a less confrontational president. this recent political shift in addition to pressure from sanctions drove iran to the negotiating table. regardless, the ayatollah, the continues in iran, spewing hateful language at israel and the west. now is not the time to ease sanctions that have been effective for a mere promise that iran's nuclear weapons program will be temporarily suspended. the sanction's intent was to prevent a nuclear iran. anything less than the complete dismantling of its nuclear weapons program is unacceptable. mr. speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition?
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without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. the u.s. motion picture and television industry have brought economic benefits across the nation. mr. cardenas: it supported 1.9 million jobs and $104 billion in total wages in 2011. u.s. film exports enjoy a positive trade balance with a surplus of $2.2 billion recorded in 2011. however, theft of intellectual property trends, success and india is a major source of that threat. india accounts for more than half of all illegal movie films. these pirated copies are sold online and on the black market, t only in india but around the globe. india's irresponsible policies need to change. they need to pass anti-cam chording laws. we want to share our on-screen treasures with the world, but we can't stand by and let them be stolen at the expense of the
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hardworking americans who bring these films to life. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. for what purpose does the gentleman from pennsylvania seek recognition? >> i ask permission to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. for 14 years, bill was the man who kept bucks county moving. mr. rickert served since 1999 as the founding executive director for the bucks county transportation management association and under his leadership, they successfully completed a number of projects to improve transportation access and mobility throughout the area. mr. fitzpatrick: including connecting commuters to regional rail service by shuttle and improvements to the route 13 corridor in lower bucks county as well as many others. aside from his service at the t.m.a., mr. rickette worked with community organizations to make bucks county a better place to live and to work, including serving on boards at the bucks county chamber of
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commerce and development advisory zone. for his efforts, bucks county finds many ways to enhance a way of life. i want to thank mr. rickette and wish him nothing but the best in his well-deserved retirement. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. for what purpose does the gentleman rise? >> to address the house for one minute and to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. mr. kingston: thank you, mr. speaker. one of the great pleasures of serving on the defense committee is we get to be associated with a large number of people who are in the armed services. and what one such acquaintans and friend is major tom e. lamm. he's the congressional budget liaison to the army to the appropriations committee. he was also the military fellow in our office and got to know the good folks in south georgia and our staff and we all grew
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to love tom. i want to submit for the record a number of things about tom's life, but i got to tell one story about him. and you, mr. speaker, as a member of the military, will appreciate this but we were traveling in a remote part of the world and had to make an unexpected stop because of a weather delay in our travel and had to get into a dirt runway on a particular -- in a particular location and then we had to split up the group because of a weight problem and weather problem and just complications. so one of tom's duties was to reassign people on a new and a different airplane, smaller airplane, and he was having trouble getting everybody onboard because of the weight issue and finally i said to tom, tom, what is the problem? i'm counting up the number of seats and there should be enough room and he said, sir, we have to go by weight and i've asked each member of
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congress what their weight is and, sir, not everybody is giving me their accurate weight. and so i'm having to do a little bit of balancing and avoid embarrassment to everybody. and it was just amazing to me, here's this guy, military officer, an iraqi and afghan veteran and yet he had the diplomacy to handle the situation like this with a smile, with humor and get us out of this location by splitting up everybody and not causing any turmoil or friction and that's just a small example of the kind of things that today's military leaders can do and i know there were a lot of bigger issues he dealt with when he was in iraq and afghanistan and indeed working in the budget office. i have worked with him on lots and lots of different issues, but tom lamm to me, mr. speaker, represents the finest in the military and the finest in the united states of america.
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i wish tom and his wife, emily, the best in their next duty assignment. tom, thank you for all the great service you've given the united states government, the congress and our office in particular. . the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition? without objection, the gentleman s recognized for one minute. mr. lamalfa: i appreciate the opportunity to memorialize a friend who passed away recently. her name is hazel reed. everyone referred to her as hayes and that's part of the fun of who she was. she enjoyed her ranch and active in her community with political-type issues and standing up for the freedom and values that this country is founded on. i appreciated her greatly for
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her spirit, her feistyness and take that time out of her life to be involved in the political process and standing up for the community and its values. i'm happy at least memorialize her. we will miss her, hazel reed, known as hayes, in paradise, california. god bless her. i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: is there anyone else seeking recognition for one minute? under the speaker's announced policy of january 3, 2013, the gentleman from illinois, mr. roskham, is recognized as the designee of the majority leader. mr. roskam: i ask unanimous consent that all members have five legislative days to include extraneous materials in the subject of this special order. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. roskam: mr. speaker, there are hinge points in history.
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there are times at which you can sense that history is moving almost on a hinge from one trajectory to another trajectory. in my sense and my observation is that the united states is experiencing such a hinge right now. ok, what's the hinge? what's the change? what's going on? here's what's happening. the administration has made a decision that is moving subtlety in some ways but the results are going to be consequential and we are going to be in a different position. the hinge will move us from our current policy, which says that iran shall not be a nuclear power. that is the stated position of the united states. it is unambiguous. there's no ambiguity about that, at least not up until now, but the hinge that is changing is a direction that begins to say, well, maybe not.
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maybe, instead, we need a policy of containment and that's a very dangerous direction, mr. speaker. that's a direction that we ought not go. it's a direction, unfortunately, that the obama administration is leading us right now, and i'm convinced its a mistake. the house of representatives has a responsibility, as part of a co-equal branch of government. we have worked and passed sanctions that are robust and dynamic, that aren't taken up by the false claim of the iranians, false promise of future conduct. we need our colleagues on the other side of the rontonda to take on a rigorous sanctions bill and push back very, very aggressively, because here are the thing, the iranians are allowed to enrich. there are no investigations as it relates to the warheads or their missile capacity. so what's happening? the iranians gain an advantage of time and money, we squander
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both. this is a time when the united states needs to be clear and not ambiguous. so there are members who are gathered here today, mr. speaker, to talk about the seriousness of this issue, to admonish the administration and encourage them to change course and we hope to highlight the significant nature of the shift in american foreign policy that we are seeing laid out before us . i would be honored to recognize my colleague and friend, the gentleman from california, mr. sherman. mr. sherman: i thank the gentleman for yielding. the political pund its are focused on -- pund its, are focused on was this a good deal or a bad deal. we aren't here to give a grade
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to the administration. we are here in congress to decide what legislation should be passed. congress is a policy-making body, although so often those in the administration think that we are, at most, advisers or critics. but let's take a look at this deal and we'll see that what we get out of it is at least overstated by its proponents. because we are told that this halts their enrichment of uranium. it is true that it limits their 20% uranium. and iran will not be making progress during the six-month period of this deal toward its first bomb. but they will be making very substantial progress toward their eighth, ninth and tenth bomb and iran is not a nuclear
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power until they have some to hide, one to two to test. it is not but their objective to have but one. because throughout this agreement, it is very clear, the centrifuges keep spinning. the amount of low-enriched uranium keeps growing. but we're told that iran will not be increasing its stockpile. if you read the agreement, yes, they will. but they have to convert to uranium oxide metal that which they produce during the term of this agreement. there are some proponents of the agreement that says, well, that means they're neutralizing all that they produce under the agreement. that is hardly true. i have been the chair or ranking member of the terrorism and nonproliferation subcommittee since it was created in the early part of this century, and i've worked with the
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nonproliferation experts. the fact is that this uranium oxide, this huge new additional stockpile to be created over the next six months can be converted ack to gas youse form and then enriched form and converting it back will only take a couple of weeks. this agreement provides that iran make substantial progress toward more low-enriched uranium, building its stockpile toward a real collection of nuclear bombs. we are also told that we have given up very little in this agreement. we have given up far more than you can find in the text, because the most important thing about our sanctions is momentum. and we passed additional sanctions in 2010, 2011, 2012 and if it hadn't been for this agreement, the senate would have
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passed the bill we worked on in the summer and passed additional sanctions in 2013. the content of those sanctions is important, but even more important is the momentum. if you are a multinational corporation you can find a law firm that can find loopholes, but you will decide not to invest a lot into that business program because congress is going to pass more sanctions. now you know we aren't passing any sanctions in 2013. and the question before us as legislators is whether we will be passing sanctions in 2014. why is momentum so important, not just for those businesses deciding whether to pass the loopholes. 's kerns si values, it's consumers' confidence, it's investment and we saw the celebrations in tehran as the business community celebrated this agreement, because it ends
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the continuing momentum toward additional sanctions. but we're not here again to grade the administration. that's for pollsters and pundits, we are here to decide whether to pass legislation. it is clear we aren't going to pass legislation that becomes effective in 20136789 the question is before us is whether we will pass legislation that becomes effective june 1, 2014 and the reason the administration sent some of its top officials to brief us in a classified briefing today is they want to convince us not to take any action in the first five or six months in 2014. what does that mean? that means in effect, we are not going to take action in to 14. why is that? most people think that this deal expires in late may, six months after it was adopted in november 24, 2013. that's not the case.
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the start date is some day to be determined sometime probably in late january. so if we as a congress are convinced not to take any action, not to pass any legislation, not to go through the committee process and the markup until after this agreement has terminated, we're talking about late july. well, at the end of july, we go on break. we come back for what, two or three weeks between then and the november elections. so if the administration can convince us to not do anything until six months after the trigger date, which is a date to be determined sometime in january, they can assure the iranians that no new sanctions will be adopted in 2014. and that will be apparent to those doing business in iran and those doing business with iran. the administration complimented us more than once saying these
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sanctions are what brought iran to the table. but let us remember that the administration opposed the adoption of these sanctions every single time. the reason we did not adopt any sanctions against iran in 2009 was opposition from the administration and the tremendous intellectual clout and credibility that the state department and administration bring. but it's not just this administration. we didn't pass any sanctions during the entire eight years of the prior administration. oh, we passed some through the house, but they stopped them in the senate. and with considerable effort, not one bill became law. so we've seen two administrations that do their best to delay and dilute and prevent, delay, dilute and prevent sanctions legislation. and so now they say, isn't it great we have this legislation, but don't pass any new legislation.
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let us remember, they were against the legislation they now say is so great. the best example of this is the kirk-menendez amendment in 2011. that was the bill that prevented iran's central bank from clearing their petroleum dollar-did he nominated transactions through the american banking system. what did the administration say in the form of a letter from secretary geithner? he wrote in -- on december 1, 2011. i'm writing to express the administration's strong opposition to this amendment. it threatens to undermine effective sanctions. in addition, the amendment would potentially yield an economic benefit to the iranian regime. there's only one reason iran is at the table today, it's because of the sanctions we have adopted over the last three years and the most important of those was
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the menendez-kirk sanctions that the administration fought against. adopt ought to do is to legislation providing additional sanctions and we have already written them. we passed the bill in june with 400 votes on this floor. have those sanctions, and i would think others, go into effect on june 1 unless congress in an expedited proceeding passes a legislation saying, hold off. we have seen enough progress, these sanctions don't need to go into force. . we can do the right thing in the last few days of july as if congress turns on a dime, as if the state department has been unsuccessful in delaying, defeating and diluting sanctions in the past. that i think would be a
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mistake. with that i think i've used quite a bit of the gentleman's time. i would point out that this deal calls for a rollback of sanctions that violates american law in a number of respects. it will not be the first time that an administration has sanction enforce the bills passed by congress. i will say that this administration from 2010 through 2013 has done a much better job enforcing such legislation than the either two prior administrations but as a technical matter, the administration has agreed to waive that which the law will not allow to waive, particularly section 504 and i'll go into the details in some other forum. i yield back to the gentleman.
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mr. roskam: i thank the gentleman for his leadership on this important issue. highlighting the timing, mr. speaker, and it is an illusion to think, as the gentleman said, this all turns on a dime on the first of june. with that i'd like to carolina, mr. hudson. mr. hudson: mr. speaker, the nuclear deal agreed upon with iran is shameful. there's no better example of this than iran's announcement just days after the agreement was reached to open a new nuclear plant that is not even subject to iaea inspection. any nuclear deal must include swift and decisive action that forces iran to completely abandon its crusade to acquire nuclear weapons capability. must not give a dangerous regime with a pension for terrorism and extremism the capability to build a weapon before the world can react. a nuclear equipped iran is the most dangerous threat to israel and the world and to the stability of the middle east.
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indeed, iran with a nuclear weapons capability is a direct threat to the united states. mr. speaker, negotiations like this require serious discussions about our foreign policy in the middle east. not a reckless decision by president obama that weakens our national security, that threatens our allies and lacks the support of this congress and frankly the american people. reducing sanctions now merely rewards bad behavior and fundamentally halts the progress we've already made. indeed, instead of reducing our influence and taking steps backwards, we must pursue every avenue to ensure that iran does develop a nuclear weapon. the only suitable agreement is one that starts with iran ending the uranium enrichment program. otherwise, we should not loosen sanctions on this bad actor. i thank you for the time and
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yield back to the gentleman. . roskam: mr. speaker, i yield to the gentleman from colorado, mr. lamborn. mr. lamborn: i want to thank mr. roskam, a leader here. he and i are co-chairs of the republican israel caucus and i share with many colleagues on both sides of the aisle deep concern over the interim agreement that this administration has reached with iran over its nuclear program. we have struck a deal that weakens sanctions against a country that's infamous for its deaccepting and deceit, a deal that does nothing about the infrastructure of its nuclear program. in the weeks since the accord was announced, we already see the first signs how these sanctions, which are what brought iran to the negotiating table in the first place, are being eroded by other countries, eager to resume trade with iran, as many of us predicted. weakening the sanctions now without demanding that iran dismantle its nuclear program takes away our leverage.
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they have not stopped a single one of its 19,000 centrifuges from enriching uranium. they are not dismantling its plutonium plant either, a plant which has absolutely no peaceful civilian purpose. we are witnessing every occurrence of the effort that failed to prevent north korea from acquiring nuclear weapons but in an even more volatile and dangerous region of the world. all this is being done with a country that our own state department has long defined as the chief state sponsor of international terrorism and which is determined to get nuclear weapons. by giving up our leverage in return for a flawed interim agreement, we are only reducing the chances that a productive accord can only be reached with iran over its nuclear program, where iran actually renounces its right to enrich uranium. i thank the gentleman and i yield back.
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mr. roskam: i thank the gentleman. mr. speaker, i yield to the gentleman from illinois, mr. davis. mr. davis: thank you, mr. speaker, and thank you to my good friend and colleague from the great state of illinois, mr. roskam, for leading this special order on a very important subject. we have concerns. we should have concerns over a deal with iran, especially as americans. it wasn't too long ago where president clinton told us that north korea would abide by a similar deal. they agreed to stop their nuclear ambitions in order to get sanctions lifted and get billions in aid from the united states, but they went ahead and secretly continued their program. i caution this administration and the american people to make sure that this doesn't happen again with iran. this interim deal allows iran to continue enritching uranium to 5% purity level and to keep
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building new centrifuges to repair old ones. it calls for iran to convert 20% of enriched uranium, either fuel or to a diluted 5% stock, but these processes can easily be reversed. especially since this interim deal does not force iran to disassemble the infrastructure that allowed it to produce enriched uranium in the first place. a nuclear iran is a grave danger to our friend and greatest ally in the middle east, the state of israel. the rest of our allies throughout the world and our own foreign policy interest. as henry kissinger noted in "the wall street journal" the heart of the problem is iran's construction of massive nuclear infrastructure and stockpiled enriched uranium far out of proportion to any plausible civilian energy production. i am very concerned that this interim deal does not address the issues at hand and furthermore, easing sanctions as part of the interim deal causes us to lose leverage at
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the negotiating table. as many of my colleagues have already mentioned, it's these sanctions that brought them to the negotiating table, and we cannot lose sight of their effectiveness. i actually happen to agree with my colleagues here in the house, like mr. roskam and my senator, mark kirk, that we should increase sanctions, and that would give us a stronger negotiating stance and draw more concessions from iran. the world needs to be a much safer place for all of us, and the only way to make that a safer place is to stop iran's nuclear capabilities. and mr. speaker, this deal does not do that. i yield back. mr. roskam: thank you, mr. speaker. i yield to the gentleman from arizona, mr. franks, and as he's approaching the microphone, let me make one point and that's something that mr. davis just eye lated. sanctions are working, sanctions that brought the iranians to the table. so think of it this way.
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you got a hold of a pitbull and you got it and it's a very dangerous animal and it's ferocious. if you let it go it may attack you. why would you ever say, you know what, let's loosen our grip and try this again? it doesn't make any sense. i yield to the gentleman from arizona. mr. franks: well, i certainly thank the gentleman. and mr. speaker, i would suggest there are two components to every threat in terms of national security that this country and other nations face. and that first component is that of intent. and the second is that of capacity. if one listens to the rhetoric that the iranian leaders have spoken in recent years, the intent issue should be settled clearly in our minds. the question that remains is their capacity. i would suggest to you, mr. speaker, that if indeed iran gains a nuclear weapons capability that the world will step in the shadow of nuclear
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terrorism. terrorists the world over will have indirect access to nuclear weapons and my children and those of the members of this body will face a forever future that is uncertain every step they take. mr. speaker, about eight years ago i stood here in this same spot and called for iran to be referred to the security council. at that time they only had 160 centrifuges and of course they called -- the call for them to be referred to the security council was diminished and people said they need 3,000 centrifuges for a full-blown nuclear weapons program. and today, mr. speaker, iran has 19,000 centrifuges. and those centrifuges will continue to spend, most of them, under this agreement that the president has announced. this agreement that the president has announced ignores not only u.s. law but ignores the u.n. sanctions that are in
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place. and it also ignores the fact that iran has not made any concessions in this area in the last 30 years. it also ignores the position that this deal puts israel in, one that is untenable and more impossible than any i have seen in my lifetime. the naivity of this administration in dealing with iran is something that is simply breathtaking. mr. speaker, i would just suggest to you that if iran gains nuclear weapons, we will need a new calendar. it will change our reality in the world that much. and i would say to you that while there's still time, we need to act. d you know, mr. speaker, there is that moment in the life of every problem when it is big enough to be seen and still small enough to be addressed but in terms of iran's nuclear weapons pursuit, that window is closing quickly. and whatever this body can do,
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whatever this president can do to prevent iran from gaining a nuclear weapons capability must be done soon because soon they will have the ability to ignore our treaties and only a military prevention would prevent it. i would say to you, mr. speaker, that whatever our cost is for preventing iran from gaining nuclear weapons, it will pale in significance compared to the cost of allowing iran to become a nuclear armed nation. i yield back. mr. roskam: i thank the gentleman. you know, mr. speaker, it's amazing thing to think about how aggressive iran has been without a nuclear weapon. at is worldwide sponsor of terror, going after and talking about the straits of hormuzz and things like that. can -- hormuz and things like that. can you imagine a world that
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had a significant nuclear threat behind it? it would change the dynamic entirely. i think one of the weakness of the administration's proposed deal, it puts approval on enrichment. up until now it's been american policies that says you can't enrich. you have no right to a nuclear capability. and let's be frank, there's nobody with a straight face that's saying that the iranians have any interest in pursuing nuclear technology because of an interest in global warming. you know, this is not an energy pursuit at all. it's clearly a pursuit to manipulate the world stage toward their end. toward their end that oftentimes are driven by terror. one of the great advocates of a strong u.s.-israeli relationship and one of the great advocates of a strong u.s. foreign policy is the gentlelady from florida, former chairman of the foreign affairs committee, to whom i'd yield now, ms. ileana ros-lehtinen.
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ms. ros-lehtinen: thank you so much, mr. speaker. i want to thank mr. roskam for his leadership in spear heading this discussion on the dangers of last month's interim nuclear agreement deal with iran. as we've had more time to dissect this deal, it is becoming clearer and clearer that despite secretary kerry's claim that no deal is better than a bad deal, we've been had. in exchange for the one thing that iran so desperately needs, sanctions relief to jump-start its flailing economy, the administration received nothing more than window dressing to stop iran's nuclear program. this interim deal is the unraveling of the sanctions policy that was so painstakingly crafted over the past 10 years. and it was aimed at bringing iran's nuclear program to an end. we've already seen other nations eager to get back into the iranian market, and it will
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now be nearly impossible to stop the cash infusion into the iranian regime. how can we stop this? this deal is contrary to u.s. sanctions law. it is contrary to u.n. security council resolutions that explicitly prohibit iran from being able to enrich its own uranium. by accepting this deal, the administration has acquiesced to iran's illegitimate claim to a right to enrich uranium, and it has done nothing to dismantle the nuclear infrastructure of iran. any temporary pause in iran's progress can now be easily started right up again with no real detriment to tehran's march toward nuclear weapons capability. the administration has struck a deal with an iranian regime that is one of the world's biggest supporters of terrorism, and as the u.s. designated state sponsor of
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terrorism. it has offered sanction relief to the very same man who only 10 years ago, while serving as the chief nuclear negotiator of iran to the west, boasted, boasted, mr. speaker, of using deception to buy time for iran's nuclear program to progress. the administration has use. to rouhani's rou of it will continue construction with experts believing that iran will exploit a possible loophole in the agreement to allow it to build important components of this heavy-water reactor off-site and we continue to see iran make advances on other nuclear weapons programs such as the development of ballistic pi
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missile technology able to launch a payload. not only this dangerous for the precedent that it sets that rogue regimes will get rewarded at the expense of our allies who play by the rules but it weakens our credibility and harms our relations with other countries. this sends a terrible message to other countries who have long feared iran becoming nuclear but from refrained from seeking their own nuclear program because the united states had promised that we would not allow iran to enrich uranium or complete its heavy-water reactor. this deal will create a loss of trust from saudi arabia and others who now see a double standard from the united states. our closeest friend and ally,
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israel, feels a continual threat from iran. president obama has weakened the trust and ability of the united states and has strengthened the legitimacy of the illegitimate iranian regime. it is a double whammy and lose stature by elevating a dangerous regime and all for what? our ability to prevent a nuclear-armed iran and all-out arms race in the middle east. it's not going to happen. we are going to see a nuclear-armed iran. we are going to see an all-out arms race in the middle east and we tarnish our relationship with our trusted allies. i remain committed, mr. speaker, that ensuring that iran never becomes a nuclear-capable country will happen. i urge my colleagues in the senate to take up the sanctions legislation that we in the house
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overwhelmingly passed earlier this year. mr. speaker, iran has no right whatsoever to enrichment. there can be no ambiguity here. the united states must not accept any new deal with iran that does not end iran's enrichment program completely and does not completely dismantle the nuclear infrastructure of this dangerous regime. i thank mr. roskham for his time and leadership and we will continue the fight. mr. roskam: i thank the gentlelady. and at this time, i would like to yield to the gentleman from exas, mr. weber. . mr. weber: i thank the gentleman from illinois, our distinguished deputy whip. mr. speaker, this house agrees on almost virtually every issue brought before it. however, this is one issue on which this house agrees, we all
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agree. we must never allow a nuclear-armed iran. repeatedly, this congress has passed resolutions condemning a nuclear iran as well as multiple pieces of legislation strengthening an iran sanctions policy in the hopes of halting their progress. a number of resolutions calling for sanctions increased scrutiny and the cessation have also passed the u.n. security council. and yet, instead of tightening the sanctions policy, a policy which has forced iran to the negotiations table in the first place, this administration seems hell-bent on easing those sanctions and allowing the release of billions of dollars in assets in finances to iran.
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even more incredulous, we still don't have a finalized bill, much less know the details of what they're planning. as a result of this administration's easement, iran is already threatening an oil price war within open he can and companies are jockeying to play with a country that has no restrictions upon enrichment or upon nuclear weapon nizzation. the teams of the so-called deal allow iran to continue enrichment, directly violating multiple u.n. resolutions, directly violating u.s.-stated policy and directly violating international-stated policy. the institute for science and international security recently published a report indicating that iran was a mere few months away from reaching that nuclear
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threshold. however, thr administration's negotiations do nothing regarding dismantling systems obviously aimed at weaponization. they do nothing regarding the removal of uranium-enriched beyond civilian needs. and they do nothing regarding work on delivery systems or ballistic missiles and do nothing to stop enrichment currently taking place. in essence, iran has received everything they wanted and we've got nothing. christmas has come early in iran. the iranian government, mr. speaker, is not to be trusted. it's been demonstrated time and time again, if we intend to keep our country safe and strong, we cannot grant concessions without first verifying behavioral
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changes from political unstable countries like iran. we tried that tact, mr. speaker, in north korea. how's that been working for us? members of congress should refuse to stay silent on this issue. it is time for the senate to step up to the plate and pass the nuclear iran prevention act. it is way past time for our administration and our negotiators to take a hardline stand against this evil. here's a plan to do that. i'll give you seven things. demand that, number one, iran stops human rights violations and release like a former u.s. marine and pastor and ex-f.b.i. agent. number two, stop the exportation of terrorism and renounce terrorism. number three, stop all the centrifuges, destroy them and
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allow unlimited access from the iaea. number four, publicly apologize to america and israel for calling them the large and small satan. number five, recognize israel's right to exist as a jewish state. number six, withdraw from syria. they want to prove that iran is serious, and finally number seven, wait a year and show the world they're serious. we want action, mr. speaker, not promises. as former senator once stated if the lion is going to lie down with the lion, we want to use our strength, show our strength, negotiate from a position of strength. to do anything else may make israel the lamb. this current administration needs to understand that this
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deal is a bad deal. i'm randy weber, there you have it. thank you. mr. roskam: i thank the gentleman for his insight and his perspective and add monday is for action. and at this point, i would like to yield to the gentlelady from indiana. mrs. walorski: thank you, mr. roskham and thank you for the opportunity to speak about this issue tonight and thank you mr. speaker. in the state of the union address on january 24, 2012, president obama said, let there be no doubt, america is determined to prevent iran from getting a nuclear weapon and i will take no options off the table to achieve that goal. on march 4, 2012, president obama again stated his desire to prevent a nuclear-armed iran. he said, iran's leaders understand that i do not have a policy of containment, i have a policy to prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
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president obama said of iran, the clock is ticking and we're going to make sure that if they do not meet the demands of the international community, we are going to take all options necessary to make sure they don't have a nuclear weapon. 14 months later, the clock is ticking and iran is closer to acquiring nuclear weapons capability. now that the world leaders have reached an interim agreement on iran's nuclear program, we must be able to verify compliance and demand that any final deal completely dismantle iran's nuclear program. there are three reasons for the international community to demand the suspension of nuclear enrichment. first, tehran must stop all enrichment activities. iran is indirect violation of mandatory human rights to suspend all enrichment.
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by not requiring iran to abide by multiple u.n. resolutions, we are awarding that behavior. we are signalling to the entire world we aren't serious. second, a nuclear armed iran threatens our national security. the threat of a nuclear-armed iran is not something that is talked about in the halls of this congress. every time i'm home i hear the fears who worry how acts of terrorism might impact gas prices, food prices and the well-being of loved ones. since 1984, our government has designated iran as a state sponsor of terrorism. has ate department characterize d as the most active sponsor of terrorism. it has provided weapons, training and funding to ham asand hezbollah, who are responsible for the members of civilians. third, a nuclear-armed iran
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threatens to further destabilize a volatile region. if iran is allowed to pursue its nuclear ambitions, the region highlighted by perpetual conflict in places like iraq, syria and yemen will become more destabilized. it will jeopardize our allies and partners in the region like israel. i believe now more than ever the united states must renew our unbreakable commitment to israel and her inherent right to self-defense. iran's continued violation of u.n. and international atomic energy agency restrictions have its the world to question future agreements. mr. roskham and mr. speaker, i call on the president to remember his words to the american people about preventing tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and i urge the president to use all tools at his does
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possessal, including additional sanctions to persuade iran from developing nuclear weapons. thank you, and i yield back my time. mr. roskam: thank you, mr. speaker. i would like to yield to the mrs. lady from minnesota, bachmann, a member of the house intelligence committee. mrs. bachmann: i say thank you to my colleague, peter roskham, when we came in together in 2006. it has been a privilege to serve, who is not only the head and co-chair of israel caucus but strong zwender of a strong united states posture, one is to help the world to safety and one we continue to maintain for the benefit of the american people. you see, this is a very interesting time that we're in. we we have watched the hinge of history turn just in the events of these last several weeks.
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why do i say that? i say that because the obama administration and the negotiators of the obama administration have entered into a deal that could effectively guarantee that iran will obtain the certainty of a nuclear weapon. now i know it is the stated intention of the obama administration that just the opposite of that will happen, but there is a big difference between theory and intention and the outcome of the result. . we listened to members of the administration and they seem convinced of their theory. their theory goes something like this. we believe that iran has capacity to continue to enrich uranium and do it for a peaceful
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purpose they believe that it's possible to verify that iran would do that. but what about the reality? twhast the reality of what the supreme leader of iran has said -- what's the reality of what the supreme leader of iran has said. the supreme leader was not vague, he was quite clear. he gave a speech on press tv and want the world to know what his intentions were he gave a speech in front of tens of thousands of paramilitary groups and the iranian revolutionary guard and he said it will be iran's decision that we will not change, in his words, our nuclear program one iota. so apparently, according to the supreme leader, the program as iran originally envisioned it will go on. it will go on at the same pace
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it was going on before, with no change, in his words. once the agreement was struck, there's a real question, and the question was this. will iran maintain the indigenous, inherent quote-unquote right to enrich uranium. that's the whole ballgame, mr. speakerment will iran have the right to enrich uranium? what do you need to build a nuclear weapon? you need fuel for that weapon. whether it's plutonium or whether it's uranium. iran wants to make sure they achieve the goal so they're engaging both in developing plutonium and uranium. they have a heavy water reactor that, the iarak facility, that's under -- the arak facility, that's under construction. we have a six-month interim agreement where we're supposed to get to a final negotiation.
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the plutonium facility is not built yet but it's under construction. one of those items is building a road to the reactor. that road continues to be built. there is no effort to stop that from being done. and there is virtually no way for us to be able to stop mobile components from being built elsewhere and eventually brought in to the heavy water reactor for the plutonium site. that's an issue. that's a big issue. and the other one being enrichment. we know today that iran has something like 19,000 centrifuges, min pulmo10,000 of those centrifuges are spinning. so much so that the estimate that they have between nine and 10 tons of enriched uranium. if we were serious about stopping iran from creating a nuclear weapon, there's several simple things we would do.
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we would make sure iran would shut down the heavy water plutonium reactor and make sure that iran would dismantle, take a sledgehammer to the centrifuges. gone. that hasn't happened. not to one. the centrifuges remain. so if you have centrifuges enriching, if you have enriched uranium, if you are continuing to enrich, i'd say you've got a program. now this is very interesting. because we just concluded a negotiation. from my experience as a formal -- former federal tax attorney, did a lot of negotiating, usually when two sides are negotiating, they do it for a reason. and the reason is because they want to be better off, both parties, they want to be better off based upon the agreement that they negotiated. now, it seems to me something happened along the way during this negotiation.
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it makes me wonder if the obama administration negotiators forgot which side they were negotiating for. now why do i say that? i say that because take a look at what iran got out of the deal. i want to give full attribution to illinois senator mark kerr who created this terrific graphic. that the what senator kirk lets us know about the ayeement. what we are getting -- about the agreement. what we are getting out of the deal is zero centrifuges dismantled. these are the machines that create fuel for nuclear weapons. not one will be dismantled of the 19,000. zero uranium of the nine to 10 tons will be shipped out of iran. the material remains in iran. the ability to create more material remains in iran. looks like a good thing for iran. zero nuclear facilities are
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closed. we know there's even more than we thought originally. the 's natan, fardo, and plutonium reactor at arak, let alone other covert programs we're not aware of. last no -- there's no delay on the plutonium reactor. the supreme leader made it clear, we read the agreement to say we are not going to stop any construction on the plutonium reactor. i would say that's a violation of the agreement right there. what's the reaction of the obama admks? what's been the reaction of the negotiators? do they have egg on their faces? do they look a little foolish from this agreement they've struck? we haven't heard anything from the current negotiators. there's also no stop in the missile testing. if iran has a nuclear weapon, if they have the fuel for a nuclear weapon, and if they have the capability to deliver that weapon through missile testing,
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i'd say they've got something. there's also no stopping terrorism from iran and there's no stop in human rights abuses. many americans aren't aware that there are americans who are eing held hostage today in iran. when ronald reagan dealt with the soviet union to try to end the cold war, ronald reagan handed the soviets a list of dissidents that he wanted freed. in order for him to begin these talks with the soviet union. he sent a signal to the soviet union. it said in america, we believe every american life counts. that sent a very strong message. in the case of the obama administration negotiators they didn't even bring it up. they didn't demand that one american be released before we talk. this is interesting. because the obama administration put a lot of pressure on prime
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minister netanyahu of israel he said, you, mr. prime minister, have to agree to release over 1,000 murderous thugs, including murderers who murdered an american, before the palestinians will come to the table to negotiate with you on the israeli-palestinian conflict. that was our president who put pressure on the prime minister. you've got to release thugs in order to negotiate. we would put that kind of pressure on israel and we wouldn't put that kind of pressure on iran? you see, that's why, mr. speaker, i ask the question -- did the negotiators forget which nation they were negotiating for? because it looks to me like the score is pretty clear. united states zero, iran made out on the deal. the sad thing about that final score, and let's hope it's not
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the final score, is that again, the hinge of history turns. and if you have an iran with a nuclear weapon, it won't be just iran. you will explode proliferation, saudi arabia will have a nuclear weapon, egypt will have a nuclear weapon. we will have a nuclear weapon most likely in lebanon. and then at that point what will happen with terrorist organizations reich hezbollah, al qaeda, the al news rah front anden -- the al nusrah front and on and on from there. the world change the hinge of history turnsful that's why this isn't political, that's why this is bipartisan here tonight. it's why mr. roskam has taken this very important, courageous step of holding this time when members of congress can weigh in because we aren't about bashing the obama administration. that's not why we're here. we're here because we believe in national security. america's national security.
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israel's national security. and peace across the world. that's packs americana. america -- that's pax americana. america doing everything we can to keep the peace in the world. this action nearly guaranteed war and a threat of nuclear strike. we can prevent that. but the final deal that comes out in these final p-5 plus one negotiations must be very simple. close down the plutonium reactor. zero right to enrich for iran. and zero processing. if you do that, then we'll have a deal. yield back. mr. roskam: mr. speaker, we have had a discussion tonight that's been incredibly robust. it's been bipartisan. we've had insight from members of the intelligence committee, the armed services committee, members who have had a longtime interest in middle eastern
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affairs and american military affairs, all of whom, mr. speaker, have a clear view of history. and a clear view of history says, let's look back at past activities as the best indicator of what the future is going to be like. in summary, mr. speaker, what we know is this. that the administration has struck a bad deal, maybe for all the right reasons, but they struck a bad deal. now it's the responsibility of congress not to put its imprimatur of support on a bad deal but to act as a co-equal branch of government and say, we ought not do this. we have to recognize the weakness of it, recognize the long-term consequences of it, and we've got to hold this administration accountable. mr. speaker, i ask unanimous consent for all members to have five legislative days in which to revise and extend their remarks on the subject of the special order today and i yield back the balance of my time.
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the speaker pro tempore: so ordered. the gentleman yields back. under the speaker's announced policy of january 3, 2013, the gentleman from washington, mr. pocan, is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader. mr. pocan: thank you, mr. speaker. i ride today on behalf of the congressional progressive caucus to talk about the engine of our economy, the american worker. the american worker is known for their ingenuity, their work ethic, their drive, and their ability to get things done, faster, better, and more efficiently than our competition. but also unfortunately the american worker is working harder than ever and they still aren't getting ahead. the obstacles facing our work force have never been greater. too many people are still unemployed or underemployed. too few possess 21st century skills needed by employers. and the work force protections fought for by generations are
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under attack like never before. but tonight, the congressional progressive caucus would like to focus on two issues promoting worker fairness. first, we want to ensure that we value and respect work through a fair wage. and second, we want to ensure that our country pursues fair, not free, but fair, trade deals that ensure american workers can compete on a level playing field. mr. speaker, we are now in the biggest sales season of the year. having already passed black friday and cybermonday, businesses are relying on the sales of the next month for nearly profits. but a major problem faces our retailers this season. too many people, many of them unemployed by -- many of them employeed by retailers themselves, do not make enough money to purchase the consumer goods that drive our economy. it has been four years since minimum wage workers have received a pay raise. since that point, incomes of the
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too much 1% have grown more than 31%. while c.e.o. pay is 354 times that of the average employee. meanwhile, the minimum wage and its real value is at historic lows. adjusted for inflation, the 196 minimum wage was at $10.60 an hour. in 2013 dollars. according to the bureau of labor statistics and consumer price index. the minimum wage today is only $7.25. that comes out to approximately $15,000 a year for an individual and $30,000 a year for a family with two parents. the typical big business c.e.o. who got a 16 hkt raise in 2012 got paid 15.-- got paid $15.1 million. that person will make more in a couple of hours than a full-time
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minimum wage worker will make in a year. making $15,000 a year working full time is not enough to get by in the united states. think about the cost of rent. food. transportation. these costs keep going up. but the minimum wage does not. is there any wonder why tomorrow americans will strike at food stores for a livable wage? i joined a food strike when these workers spoke out and took the risk of losing their jobs in order to talk about the low wages they are receiving. omething is full-time workers have to strike because they can't forward their basic living expenses. americans work hard and play by the rules and can't support themselves and live in poverty, we face an economic crisis.
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consumer spending goes down and the gap between the very rich and the large group of the very poor grows very wider. mark zandi recently said for the economy to thrive we need everyone participating. mr. speaker, corporate profits are thriving. the stock market is thriving. the top 10% of the country are thriving. according to a tax expert, the top 10% earners took in 150% of the increased income in this country between 2009 and 2011. in fact, 40% of the increase in income since 2009 was the top 1% of the top 1%. and those making at least $8 million in 2011. you know who is not thriving, pretty much everyone else. during that same time period,
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incomes fell for the americans and minimum wage continues to lose its value. this is not a sustainable future for our economy. as the president said today in a speech, the combined trends of increased inequality and decreasing mobility, poses a fundamental threat to the american dream, our way of life and what we stand for around the globe. democrats have proposed a solution. and we are honored to have the president's banking. fair minimum wage act of 2013. this bill which has 150 co-sponsors in the house of representatives would gradually increase the minimum wage over three years from $7.25 an hour to $10.10 an hour and indexed in the future to increases in inflation thereafter. i have detailed the negative effects of today's unlivableable
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minimum wage. if we pass the fair minimum wage act, 30 million americans would receive a pay raise and would have more money in their waltz to support their families and support our still recovering economy. and who are these 30 million americans? critics charge they are high school students trying to make a ttle extra cash and more experience. let me put that claim to rest. it's a myth. nearly 90% of the workers who make the minimum wage are 20 years or older, more than half are over 25 years old. 55% work full-time, in other words, they rely on the minimum wage for their full-time work. and 44% have some type of a college education and associate degree or bachelor's degree or
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higher. and 56% of the low-wage workers are women. and yet, the critics still persist with these myths that raising the minimum wage will slow down hiring, especially for small businesses. just last month, speaker boehner was asked about the minimum wage and he said when you raise the price of unemployment, guess what happens, you get less of it. he continued when the american people are asking where are the jobs, why would we want to make it harder for small employers to hire people? well, speaker boehner has a very different experience than we have been given by experts across the country in my experience as a state legislator in the state of wisconsin. every time we have raised the minimum wage in the state of wisconsin, more people entered the work force and more people decided that they are willing to go out and work. and the same has been true to
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show at the national level. i support raising the minimum wage, as do businesses for a fair minimum wage. so does the u.s. women's chamber of commerce and the american sustainable business council. a number of business organizations see the very key to helping fix the economy, to help raise that minimum wage. in fact, 2/3 of small business owners across the country, according to a poll on behalf of small business majorities, 2/3 of small business owners across the country support raising the minimum wage. because small businesses -- like myself, i have owned a small business for 25 years, first, when you pay your workers with a decent wage and treat them with respect, you earn their loyalty and get their hard work and your business does better. 85% of small business owners
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already pay their owners more than the minimum wage. and second, small business owners know that we need customers and we need people making enough money to afford the very product and services that we sell. when you give a pay increase to the people who need it the most, that money goes directly back into the economy and helps support the rising tide, lifting all boats in the economy. 65% of small business owners agree, and this is quote, increasing the minimum wage will help the economy because the people with the lowest incomes are the most likely to spend any pay increases buying necessities, which will boost sales at businesses. this will increase the customer demand that businesses need to retain or hire more employees. and this is backed up by research. contrary to what speaker boehner and other critics will say, extensive research refutes the
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claim that increasing the minimum wage increases unemployment. according to the economic policy institute, raising the minimum wage would have a positive impact on our economy by investing those dollars in our economy when we need it the most. when we increase the minimum wage, we raise wages for 30 million americans. increasing salaries by 51.5 billion dollars over the next three years. and that's just not helping the wages of people who make minimum wage but millions of americans whose salaries are pegged to minimum wage. extra dollars into our economy when we need it the most. increase consumer spending when weak consumer demand is one of the biggest obstacles facing our economy. these extra earnings would increase the gross domestic product by $33 billion over the bill's three-year period, generating 140,000 jobs.
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wages, we increase increase consumers' ability to buy, which increases the gross domestic product and therefore, increases jobs. and at the very worse, raising the minimum wage has no effect on unemployment but a greater standard of living for millions of american workers. that's why 80% of americans support raising the minimum wage, including 57% of republicans and 5% of self-identified conservatives. it's a commonsense economic policy and as a small business owner, it is a good business policy. the senate will consider an increase at the end of the year and i encourage the people's house to do the very same. that's one issue that's really important, but i want to read a couple of quotes from business people specifically about raising the minimum wage. let me read a quote, first of business for a fair
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minimum wage director, said, quote, the biggest problem that main street businesses face is a lack of customer demand. with the federal minimum wage stuck at $7.25, workers have now less buying power than they did a half century ago in 1956 and far less than they had with minimum wages in 1968 adjusted for inflation. we can't build a strong economy on downwardly mobile wages. it's time to raise america by raising the minimum wage. and there are small business owners who said the exact same thing, realized what we need to do with the economy. an owner of four seasons christmas tree farm in louisiana said, quote, a minimum wage increase is long overdue. if it's not right or smart -- it's not right or smart for any business to pay a wage that impoverishedes the men and working and their families but
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impoverishedes our families. boosting the wages of our workers who can purchase goods and services they need is the best medicine for our ailing economy. and let me read from another business owner, specifically about raising the minimum wage. this is david, founder and c.e.o. of uncommon goods in new york and he said businesses don't expect the cost of energy, rent, transportation and other expenses to remain constant, yet some want to keep the minimum wage the same year after year. that kind of business model traps workers and poverty and undermines our economy. the minimum wage should require that all businesses pay employees a wage that people can live on. and i have more and more stories from small business owners who get that the best thing we can do right now is provide the minimum wage worker an increase in pay, put that money in the
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economy, create those jobs and let's give a boost to what we need most in america. but the second issue we want to address with the special order hour on the american worker is a trade deal that is coming down the pike possibly as early as the end of the year and that is the transpacific partnership. we have spoken a lot today about the need to ensure workers receive a fair wage for a hard day's work but we are concerned that another way our workers get the shortened of the stick and those are deals that ship jobs overseas. we have a massive secret and likely very harmful unfair trade deal on our hands. the transpacific partnership or the t.p.p. for short is a nafta-style agreement between the u.s. and 11 other nations that has been negotiated in secret and seems to not just
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repeat but worsen the mistakes made in the past. this coming week, t.t.p. negotiators are going to meet in singapore and they plan to have a deal by the end of the year in less than a month. we may be less than 30 days away from having a final t.p.p. deal, a deal that we have no idea what it may contain. and while we may not know what's in the bill, we do know what we have been promised and similar to the promises that people across the country and my state in wisconsin have been told before about these massive trade deals from nafta to the u.s.-korea free trade agreement. we were told that free trade would lead to increased u.s. jobs and reduce our trade deficit and boost our exports and lead to improved human rights and labor standards around the globe. unfortunately, almost every single one of those promises have gone unfulfilled. in wisconsin, we have seen the
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devastating effects of free trailed agreements such as nafta to our local manufacturing industries and our jobs. according to the bureau of labor statistics, five million americans have lost manufacturing jobs since the passage of nafta. the u.s. experienced a net loss of 700,000 jobs to mexico from nafta. as a small business owner myself, i have seen a number of american-made products dwindle that used to be available and made here in the united states sm the record on trade surpluses is equally as damaging. the year before nafta went into effect, we had a $1.66 billion trade surplus in goods with mexico. last year, we tallied a $62 billion deficit. one year after the u.s.-korea f.t.a. took effect, our trade d goods has increased by $.5
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billion, a 46% increase. countries from mexico to colombia, promises of improved labor conditions have been replaced by reports from human rights watch, amnesty international and state department oftentimes worsening abuses. with our economy continuing to recover slowly from the financial crisis, it should be our nation's priority to pursue transparent trade policies that promote american industry, protect american workers and improve the economic interests of middle-class families across our country. as i mentioned before, the t.p.p. is no worse than the deals of the past and is no better than deals of the past. it could even be worse. at this time, i would like to yield some time to my colleague from the state of connecticut. co-chair of the steering and policy committee and ranking member on the labor, health and
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human services and appropriations subcommittee, a long time legislator and hero of ine in congress, rosa delauro. s. delauro: thank you for ms. delauro: thank you, i want to thank you for all you've been doing and it's an honor to serve with you. at the heart and soul of what your interests are all about, what that chart reflects, people making the minimum wage, what is their life about, what are we doing in terms of policies we create in this institution which s an institution which would demonstrate -- what has historically been about is providing opportunity. and a drop in the minimum wage is not an opportunity for future success. and your characterization of the transpacific partnership in
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creating this kind of effort is absolutely on target. in terms of this agreement, next week, as you know, the trade ministers from 12 nations are going to meet in singapore. as u.s. trade negotiators continue to push for this partnership, the t.p.p. trade agreement, they want to push it, to move it, that we can do something by the end of this year. , this e a point before could have been a new opportunity. it represented an effort to create something that was new, sustainable model that promoted economic development, shared prosperity. but as you know, unfortunately, the talks have gone down the same road as previous trade agreements. export of more jobs. not more goods. unsafe imports. and threats to public health,
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among other things. you made it clear, the couldn'tly -- the country lost more than five million manufacturing jobs, millions of jobs since the north american free trade agreement. which i will tell my colleagues that i was proud to vote against in this body and the world trade organization. boast of those went into effect, we've seen the loss of more than five million jobs. meanwhile, again, your point well stated, wages in the united states have decreased, decreased, and economic inequality, economic inequality, something that's talked about a lot today. it's not an abstract concept. it's not an abstract construct. it is the result of public policy. that has fostered economic inequality in the united states. and that has increased as a result of the past trade
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agreements. the recent trade agreement with korea reinforced why we cannot continue to do more of the same. in its first year, u.s. exports to korea dropped 10% as imports from korea increased. the trade deficit with korea exploded by 37% in just one year. which equates to a net loss of u.s. mately 40,000 more jobs. why, in an economy that is so difficult for people today, are we embarking on public policy initiatives that increase lost jobs, lost wages, more economic uncertainty and insecurity for families? it's wrong headed. there is no reason to believe that the transpacific
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partnership trade deal will not be the same kind of raw deal for u.s. workers and more as this agreement would be unprecedented in scope. the president himself has commented that the pact would establish rules that extend far beyond traditional trade matters to include, and i quote, a whole range of new trade issues that will be coming up in the future, innovation, regulatory convergence, how we are thinking about the internet, and intellectual property. the agreement will create binding policy on future congresses in numerous areas to include those that are related to labor, patent and copyright, land use, food, agriculture and product standards, natural resources, the environment, state-owned enterprises, and
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government procurement policies. as well as financial, health care, energy, telecommunication and other service sector regulation. this is a treaty that goes beyond tariffs. the scope is as i've outlined, is unbelievable. and we also know that the lack of transparency on this treaty is unbelievable. it's interesting to note that toustry has had great access the process and what's going on. members of congress, both sides of the aisle, have not had that same access to the information in this trade agreement. and it is our constitutional authority as members of congress
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to approve trade agreements. we cannot be frozen out any longer. we know, for example, the agreement will likely lead to increases in u.s. imports of shrimp and other seafood from vietnam and malaysia. in 2012, my colleague, i believe my colleague knows this, others need to know this. in 2012, imported seafood products from vietnam were refused entry, 206 times, because of contamination concerns. while some exporters in malaysia have acted as a conduit to ship chinese shrimp to the yeats in f.d.a. circumvent
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alerts and anti-dumping duties. why have they been stopped? filthy products, contaminated products, antibiotic-laced products. putting in jeopardy the public health of people in the united states. and yet rather than improving food safety enforcement and regulation in partner nations, it may lead to a train of resources needed to ensure that food safety at agencies like the f.d.a. are called in to resolve these disputes with other countries. the agreement may even undermine critical u.s. food safety regulations. we also know from the recently leaked text that u.s. trade negotiators, and i said recently leaked because we don't have -- i repeat, we don't have access to the information. we're not able to go and -- or
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come in and have people lay it out. for us. the text of the trade negotiations are proposing an unbalanced provision to hinder our trading partners access to safe and more affordable drugs. this is not only going to raise the price of medicines overseas and preventing millions from getting the medical care they need, but it limits the ability of the united states companies exporting these drugs to grow internationally and to generate more jobs at home. incredibly, even as the administration is proposing to lower drug costs for consumers here in the yeats by proposing in its budget to modify the length of exclusivity on brand name biologics from 12 to seven years, our trade negotiators are
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demanding 12 years of data exclusivity from our trading partners, denying their people quicker access to more affordable drugs. how can the united states be in the business? it's morally unconscionable that life-saving drugs that people overseas will have less access to them. that's not what we are as a nation. not our values. these and other critical areas are being negotiated without sufficient congressional consult eags even though as i mentioned under the constitution, the congress, not the executive, has the exclusive constitutional authority to, quote, regulate commerce with foreign nations, end quote. and write the nation's laws. over the last few decades, presidents have increasingly taken over both of those powers through a mechanism known as
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fast track. simply, what it does is, it erodes congress' ability to shape the content of the free trade agreement which today, as i said again earlier, fwe well beyond tariff issues. not only does it affect the shaping of the trade agreement but it then becomes, if it's -- if you provide for fast track authority, then that means it comes to this body, and my colleague from wisconsin know this is, he served in legislative body, we have no ability to amend. and you just come and rubber stamp it. no more. no more. under the recent iteration of fast track, which expired, by the way, in 2007, u.s. trade negotiations required various stages of congressional consultation before and during the negotiations. but even that minimal level of congressional consultation has
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not occurred with regard to the transpacific partnership treaty, which is why so many of -- myself and other colleagues, including my colleague from wisconsin, mr. pocan, both sides of the aisle have made clear that the 20th century fast track and its lack of any meaningful input from congress in the formative stages of an agreement is not appropriate for the 1st century trade agreement like the transpacific partnership. more fast track is a nonstarter. what we need to do, what we need to do is to create a 21st century mechanism to negotiate, approve trade agreements, that ensure that they benefit more for america. decrease options. give them a fighting chance to
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help themselves and their families. we cannot approve a transpacific partnership agreement that continues to follow the same failed trade template. -- template that has has hurt working families for so long that jeopardize our public health here and abroad and creates binding policies on future congresses that we had no input in creating. trust of to uphold the our constituents, for them, for this economy, for our country, we need to do better. and the context and process of the transpacific partnership does not allow us to do better by our constituents or the great people of the united states. this is a treaty that needs to
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be restarted, instead of being brought up and finished by the end of the year, we need to restart the effort, have congressional input, and do something that will help to make a difference in the lives of the people that we serve. i thank the gentleman for having this special order to focus on this issue and i know that he will, as i will continue to try to make clear to the public what we are talking about, what is in this legislation, which is not going to benefit themselves and their families. that's something i know that you are committed to, and i am committed to as well and we are going to continue this battle and as far as i'm concerned, i won't speak for you, we're not going to make that end of the year treaty, there's going to be many, many roadblocks before that occurs.
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so i thank the gentleman for allowing me to participate in this special order tonight. thank you. mr. pocan: thank you, representative delauro, not only for your long history of standing up for the american worker, trying to get fair trade, not just free trade, but also for really giving a strong explanation about the problem with food coming into our country. ms. delauro: the food issue is supreme and this usually stays rn the radar. bringing it to the floor. mr. pocan: and medicine. much less labor standards. we know in vietnam, the wage is 28 cents an hour, 4% of our currently, already low minimum wage and to think that somehow we can have fair trade with a country that has 28 cent min pulmowage that has violated the work of -- the work in their factories violated safety requirements eight of 10 times they've been inspected, workers fail to get the min pulmofour --
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minimum four days a month of rest. this is not a trade partner you can have in a trade agreement that's going to at least raise the level for american workers. it can only lower the level. another concern i know you and i have had, representative delauro, is procurement, what's in this atwreement of procurement. i was an author in the state legislature in wisconsin of buy american laws, to make sure our tax dollars went to buying goods that supported american workers. and the goods in these trade agreements could take away our ability to have buy local and buy american rules and we need to change that. so thank you so much for your efforts on this, we are going to work with many other colleagues on both sides of the aisle. to do what we can to defeat this. ms. delauro: i think it's important ms. delauro: there is bipartisan support to a fast track authority as well as bipartisan
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support in opposition to this trade agreement for what it does, because people being hurt don't have a party label. the minimum wage, the drop in the minimum wage affecting democrats, republicans, independents, i don't care where you are or who ir it is affecting your life and the life of your family. i thank the gentleman again and look forward to our continuing effort. mr. pocan: thank you for your many years and your continued strong, passionate advocacy. thank you. one of the things as we talked about the various provisions, there is literally over 20 chapters that involve from everything from labor conditions, environment, procurement, food safety, intellectual property. this is a wide, wide variety of topics that are covered in the
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trade deal and the fact that congress could lose its face through a fast track agreement would be egregious. we have to represent our constituents and make sure that we defend that worker in our district. if you take congress' voice, that is wrong. we must have our say. people will say that somehow we are anti-trade. we are very much pro-trade. we just want it to be fair trade. we want it to be drafted correctly. when you have the agreement like we have seen in past agreements and what we expect to see in the t.p.p., looks again that the interest of global corporations will be the did he ahead of the american work. there are situations where foreign-owned business could have more power than our own soverage courts and where buy-american policies could be
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undermind and corporations could move their production offshore and engage us in a race to the bottom in worker protections, wages and rights and the american worker gets left behind and we can't do that. we need to make sure that congress has every possible say in the trade agreement, especially something as wide as the transpacific partnership can include. we need to know what's in these laws. and if you think about it, we don't know that. you just heard representative delauro and myself, who have been following this issue. we don't know what is being negotiated in this agreement. so we have a lot of questions and we have very few answers. does the agreement do anything to tackle currency manipulation? we don't know. does it include enforceable environmental and labor standards? we don't know. and how much does it deal with e blatantly nontrade items
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from food safety to internet freedom? once again is, we don't know. despite all these unanswered questions, despite the fact that most members of congress have barely gotten a chance to see leaked portions of the agreement and that this agreement will have lasting repercussions on our economy and workers, we have heard they are going to fast track that through congress and that is not acceptable. with all the lingering questions we have on the transpacific partnership, i believe rushing this bill through congress is dangerous and irresponsible. earlier this year, i led a letter with 35 other freshman democrats expressing concerns about transparency and making sure that we have a trade deal that's in the best interest of our constituents, our workers.
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mr. speaker our job in congress is to represent the people who sent us here, not our job to represent the interests of foreign corporations or c.e.o.'s who want to find the cheapest labor they can to increase their profit margins and not our job to sit on the sidelines while more bad trade deals get passed. we have a responsibility to the american work to ensure that they can compete on an even playing field with workers across the world. if we compete on an even playing field, we will always win. we have the work ethic and have the ability to do that. unless we are given that equal opportunity, the american work force can not be treated in a fair and sustainable way. they can't compete when their jobs are shipped overseas or wages are driven down so low that they face almost unliveable conditions and we must can and do better. we can raise the minimum wage
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and pass job-first trade deals and invest in our work force through education and job-training programs that prepare the american people for the challenges of the 21st century and that's what the congressional progressive caucus is committed to doing and that's what i encourage the entire body to help us move forward. with that, mr. speaker, the congressional progressive caucus has done the best we could onight to raise -- >> would the gentleman yield? mr. polis: i actually some months ago to show that these are not partisan concerns in a bipartisan letter with representative issa that there be more transparency about this process. i have had the opportunity to review the text in my office. my own staff wasn't allowed to
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be there with me. the american people aren't able to execute the proper oversight over something that is of great importance over the secrecy this is being negotiated. i yield back. mr. pocan: you have been an outstanding representative on behalf of the american worker. i looked at sections and my staff wasn't allowed and i wasn't allowed to take notes about the language of these agreements. but what i saw in the agreement was definitely no better than past agreements and very likely could be worse when it comes to labor standards and when it comes to our procurement policies, allowing us to have buy-american laws. the congressional progressive caucus wanted to highlight the american worker and the two issues we wanted to highlight, one was the need to raise the minimum wage, something we expect the senate may be taking up and we hope this body will take up and let's raise that minimum wage to $10.10.
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and secondly, let's make sure we have fair trade deals, not just free trade but fair trade deals that protect the american worker, protect our environment and protect intellectual property and other concerns. we can do that and the congressional progressive caucus will do that, mr. speaker. and with that, i yield back my time. the speaker pro tempore: under the speaker's announced policy of january 3, 2013, the chair recognizes the gentleman from colorado, mr. polis, for 30 minutes. mr. polis: i'm here today unfortunately to talk about the continuing inaction of this body on immigration reform. it's been 159 days since the senate passed commonsense immigration reform bill securing our borders, creating jobs for americans, restoring the rule of law, requiring employment
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verification, uniting families and this body has failed to act. the house's failure to act has already cost our economy over $6 billion. today, madam speaker, i want to talk about the human cost as well. in the week following the thanksgiving holidays, individuals are suffering because of our inaction. families that are torn apart, immigrant workers so critical for our economic success living in the united states who even helped put our thanks giving dinners on the table this year. i want to begin by telling the inspiring story of a capitol hill staffer, sadly, a former capitol hill staffer. i had the opportunity to meet erica and her mother today and i hope her story will inspire this body to finally reform our broken immigration system. erica wrote this letter to many
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of her friends, including some of our staffers, madam speaker, just the other day, about why she's leaving. deer friends, today is my last day on the hill. emails are customary and i wanted to share the unfortunate reason i'm leaving. few days ago i informed my boss i would be leaving to return home to mesa, arizona and fight against efforts to deport my mother. after years of congressional staffer during the push to bring millions of people out of the shadows i'm needed most as a daughter to my mother. my life represents a broad spectrum of people undocumented in this country and the record-setting aspects of the obama administration, families separated by deportation. my home was raided by i.c.e. on the same day i began my work in congress. the raid stemmed from a traffic
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stop. while i.c.e. is supposed to deportations for violent crimes they decided to go after my mother, who has never committed a violent crime. families being separated is nothing new. it is nearing the two million deportation mark. i had the opportunity to meet erica earlier today and i can tell you we will miss her service in this body for the member she worked for. she has her legal status thanks to president obama's deferred action program the result of the inaction of this body that the executive had to take action with the limited authority he has to give temporary reprieve to erica but no such help to her mother. who among us would choose between our job and our family wouldn't choose our family.
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as erica returns home to arizona, i wish her and her mother well and good luck in ensuring they can stay together in a country i hope values families just as it valued erica's service to congress. keep us together.organize. our inaction on immigration reform has impacted our immigrant work force, critical part of our economy. 16% of all workers in the u.s. are foreign-born and diverse sectors from agriculture to information technology to hospitality to self-employed entrepreneurs. as the aspen institute's november series working in america noted, some have great success while others are in low-paying working conditions. in my state of colorado, over 11% of our work force is
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comprised of immigrants. among them, unauthorized immigrants comprise 5% of colorado's work force. if we were to remove unauthorized immigrants from colorado tomorrow, our state, my state, would lose $8 billion in economic activity, 3.6 billion dollars in gross state product and would cost our state almost 40,000 jobs for americans that would be destroyed. if we didn't have the people that are in colorado today already working and simply lack a legal way to do that that only this body can fix. nationwide, the millions of undocumented immigrant workers are often marchingalized and exploited. in many cases they have harvested our thanksgiving diningers, perhaps cleaned your hotel room or mine, washed our
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dishes, yet their immigration status means when employers try to take advantage, they often lack a voice to stand up for stable and fair working conditions or to report crimes. undocumented workers around our country engage in difficult, dangerous work under the harsh conditions. they often fear -- live in fear of detention or deportation. consider the example of a worker in nashville who herself while cleaning in the restaurant, yet her managers refused to take her to the hospital when she was cut, for four hours. even after receiving medical treatment, her employer refused to pay any costs for an employment-related injury and it caused her a permanent handicap. consider the case of a north carolina farm worker who lacks documentation. he shares a room in a dirty and freezing bathrooms with six
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others. he rises every day to provide for his family and give them the life he never had. because his family is in another country, he hasn't seen his children in five years but his immigration senate tuesday prevents him from even visiting his family back home and being able to return to his job here. . or consider the case of an undocumented farmwork, guadeloupe. who works 12 to 14 hours a day at a rate of the minimum wage to provide schooling for her five children. while congress is working 113 days next session, 113 days next year, that's how much we'll be here. i hope it's enough time to perform our -- to reform our immigration system. while congress is working 118 days, the average undocumented farmworker's work load is closer to 200 days a year squeezed into
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36 weeks of seasonal work. working double-shifts. to be able to put food on our tables for thanksgiving. while congress works an average of three days a week and members of congress earn $3rks500 a week, undocumented workers work 53 hours a week at an average salary of $318 a week. in the time it takes congress to hold our first vote in a series of votes, 15 minutes, how long it takes people to come here and cast a vote, the average immigrant worker has picked four 30-pound buckets of grapes. our current immigration system has allowed the situation to persist and worsen. the current system lacks a pathway to citizenship without a family member who is already a citizen or legal resident. even legal workers are poorly
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paid risk having their dock units seized and live in reprehensible living conditions. h2 guest workers, low-skilled, seasonal jobs are bound to employers who hire them, can't search for other work, and are aven overloaded with debt through the fees they are charged to bring hem here and find them jobs. new laws could protect immigrant workers, protect american workers by preventing immigrant workers frunds mining laws. the immigration reform bill would provide relief and help to all workers. it is very to the senate's imgrigs reform bill that passed with more than 2/3 of the senate support including agriculture, business, labor, tech, and many others in a broad-based coalition. we're joined here on the floor by a champion of immigration
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reform, a member of the house from the great state of california, it's my honor to yield some time to the gentleman from california, mr. cardenas. mr. cardenas: thank you very much. thank you, madam speaker. i want to just explain some facts to my fellow americans. i want to remind us that immigrants contribute tremendously to our economy as workers, taxpayers and consumers. despite their contributions, immigrants face exploitation and significant barriers to advancement in our country. when we look at how important immigrants are to our economy, it comes as no surprise that when we help immigrants succeed, we help our economy succeed. one of the things i want everybody to remember as i speak for the next few minutes is that at any given time in our great nation's history, somebody in your ancestry was treated less
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than. there was a time where if you were of irish descent, you were treated badly. if you were russian, you were preeted -- treated badly. if you were chinese, you were treated badly. if you were eastern european you were treated unfairly. unfortunately, what we've had in our country is phases where one particular person who looks a certain way and especially when you think after 9/11, the people are treated differently. and the problem that i have with that is that that's not the america i was born into and that's not the america i represent, want to represent, and that's not the america that is going to make this country prosper. immigrants make up a critical component of the american labor force. immigrants accounted for nearly half of the u.s. labor force growth since the mid 1990's.
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immigrant contribute to innovation, job creation. immigrants are more likely than native born americans to start their own businesses. immigrant owned businesses employ 4.7 million americans in 2007 alone. in 2011, immigrant businesses were estimated to generate $775 billion in revenue. $125 billion in payroll. and $100 billion in income. immigrants also help to slow the aging of our labor force and the corresponding economic burdens that come with that. immigrants make up a critical component of america's agricultural industry in particular. that's what brought my father to this country who worked in the fields in the central valley of california so my mother could stay home and raise, eventually, the 11 chern they had together. about 77% of the farm labor force is foreign born, like my father, and at least one-half of
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the farmworkers are undocumented. farm work is one of the most hazardous occupations in our country and in the world and many of these jobs would go unfilled without immigrant workers. that's another thing that my father wanted for me. he worked in the fields, tirelessly. his hands would wleed, so that we, americans, could have pressure fruits and vegetables on our table. but he dreamed that his children, american-born children, could actually go to college and surpass his dreams as he only had a first grade education in the country that he came from. with the help of immigrant farm workers in america, the value of u.s. agriculture exports rose 2 1/2 times between 1989 and 2009. while exports of high value agriculture products including fruits and vegetables more than tripled.
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america, it's really important for us to understand, when we don't welcome those hard working immigrants to be part of our integrated work force, what happens is, places like argentina, who would love to compete with us, they laugh at us and say, we'll sell you our products, we'll sell you our oranges and vegetables. they're pretty good. but they're not american made. immigrants contribute to our economy through taxes, state and local taxes paid in 2010 alone by households headed by undocumented immigrants was over $11 billion. and this is according to the institute for taxation and economic policy. undocumented immigrants contributed as much as $ billion in payroll taxes to the social security program in 2010. but only took $1 billion in benefits. creating a net positive effect
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on our social security system. to benefit americans. and this is according to the social security administration. despite their contributions, immigrants face exploitation and significant barriers to advancement. and again, that's not the america we should feel proud of. we have an opportunity to pass comprehensive immigration reform in this great country on this floor. all we need is the opportunity to put a bill up for a vote. and i believe that the majority of members of this house will do the righteous thing, the right thing, and welcome those immigrants and integrate them into our system and we will see the economy of the united states of america flourish once again like we all want it to, like we hope it should, and how -- and how we all deserve to see that happen. for example, immigrants with legal status earn 10% more than those who are undocumented, again, boosting the economy. comprehensive immigration reform
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would allow imgrant students, dreamers as some of us call they will, to gain a greater earning boost as more are able to attend college and become productive members of the labor force. comprehensive emigration reform would allow undocumented entrepreneurs the ability to expander that businesses and hire american citizens. when we look at how important immigrants are to our economy, it comes as no surprise that when we help immigrants succeed, america succeeds. our country is built on the back of immigrants from europe, from africa, from the americas, from canada, from every part of this world. we are the country where dreams come true. we are the country where freedom rings true. but right now, 11 million human
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beings do not enjoy those feelings. they are here, toiling, working, we are benefiting from that. and that's a shame. we're better than that, america. we deserve an opportunity to see this legislative body vote on comprehensive immigration reform. and i'll say once again, if we don't do it because it's just the right thing to do, let's do it for the selfish reason that it will boost the economy of the united states of america more than we've seen in over 50 years. thank you and i yield back my time. mr. polis: thank you. one of the ways that h.r. 15 was actually brought to the floor of the house and brought to the -- brought to be introduced was by one of our -- the chief sponsor of the bill. the gentleman from florida in his short time in the house has made an enormous impression, particularly in pushing for comprehensive immigration reform.
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h.r. 15 which is very similar to the senate bill and if erp -- if we were to pass in this body would be able to ratified with the changes and send to the president's desk continues to gain support in this body. i'm happy to yield to its principal author, the gentleman from florida, mr. garcia. mr. garcia: thank you very much. i thank the gentleman from colorado. mr. speaker, i don't know of any other district in the united states that more clearly shows the economic contributions of immigrants than my own. you see it everywhere. from the languages spoke on the street to the diverse businesses in every corner. miami is a town built by immigrantsle it's a perfect example of what happens when instead of forcing people to live in the shadows, you welcome immigrants and you allow them to work and become valued members of the community.
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for over the last 50 years, south florida has seen unprecedented growth. and become a gateway to latin americans -- to latin america and its economy. none of this, none of this would be possible without the hard work of immigrants who came to my community searching for the american dream just like my parents did. i'd like to share a few of their stories. jose lives in homestead. it's an area in my district that produces nearly half of the winter vegetables consumed in the entire united states. he came to this country in 1986 and despite his best efforts, was unable to gain status. even after suffering from a workplace accident that resulted in his finger being amputated and another which injured his back and arm, he still wakes up at 5:00 a.m. to do whatever
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needs doing on a farm. from cleaning to packing to planting. jose's wife was deported. he is now the primary bred winner for his fam -- breadwinner for his family. both his parents tied in mexico. he was unable to say good-bye. jose does his job, pays his taxes, serves as an advocate, a mentor, for many of the farmworkers. but our immigration system has done nothing but turn a blind eye to his sacrifices. lourdes started working in the fields at the age of 10, picking asparagus, tomatoes, cucumbers, all over the east coast. despite having to drop out of high school because the work and the constant moving lourdes eventually was table complete her social work degree, 20 years after she started, and all of
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her children have been able to go to college. last year, she was recognized by the white house as a champion of hange and is now an advocate for the farmworker community and a proud champion of immigration reform. finally, i want to talk about someone who is sitting in the gallery. until the age of 8 she had always assumed she'd been born in the united states like her brother. while she eventually was granted deferred action, both of her parents have been deported. neither were criminals. in fact, her father owned a small business. there are millions of joses, lourdeses and others. they grow our food, they build our homes, and they care for our families.
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they often work at jobs that no one wants and start businesses and create jobs where there were none before. and in areas where they're needed most. our nation would not be the society it is today without the generations of immigrants who came to our shores searching for a better life. the 11 million undocumented individuals living here today are no different. they are in every way american, but on paper. if we want to secure our economic future, we need to fix our broken immigration system. . in a way that addresses our need for immigrant workers, recognizes the incredible sacrifices and hard work that immigrants endure. jose, lordes, cecia have waited long enough.
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the time to pass immigration reform is now. and if the gentleman from colorado will permit, i also want to recognize those folks who in my community labor at this a long time. they spend enormous hours and effort trying to pass this from our community, they come here, they make a difference and we thank them. some of them are in the audience today and i appreciate their work. among them, a man who has done a wonderful job for years, not only in moving shoot, but in caring for some of these -- issues, but -- the issues, but in caring for some of the children who get left behind when their parents get deported. with that i yield back to the gentleman from colorado.
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mr. polis: madam speaker, the men and women who are spending their time here would not have to be in the gallery advocating if this house simply took up the bill. you think they want to be spending their time here, madam speaker? is that what you think? they want to be spending their time here in the gallery? probably traveling at their own expense to washington. and you're saying we're addressing them and that's what you're upset about, madam speaker? i want you, madam speaker, to address the reason that they are here. they are here because our government is tearing apart their families, madam speaker. the speaker pro tempore: will the gentleman from colorado understand, all members are -- mr. polis: let the speaker understand that the speaker is obstructing h.r. 15 from coming to the floor. will the speaker understand that? the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is out of order. mr. polis: will the speaker understand that? will the speaker understand that? the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman may proceed. mr. polis: will the speaker understand that the speaker is preventing h.r. 15 from coming to the floor and that is why there are men and women in the gallery that potentially face deportation and their families are being torn apart.
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it's very simple. it's very simple. very simple, madam speaker. very simple. we need an immigration system that reflects our values as americans. a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws. one that creates jobs for americans, one that reduces our deficit by over $200 billion. secures our border, prevents terrorists from entering our country. so we know who's here and it ensures that crimes are reported. we can do, that madam speaker. and you know what? i've heard it said that perhaps some prefer to do it piecemeal. let's see what the pieces are and let's have a meal. that's what thanksgiving spirit is all about. we'll be happy to look at the pieces and let's seek them. in fact the judiciary committee has reported out four bills. now, those bills aren't perfect by any means, but through the rules committee and the amendment process on the floorics hope that we could potentially -- floor, i hope that we could potentially make them a part of a bill. but those four bills have languished. in the meantime, other bills
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that have come through the judiciary committee, for example, an asbestos bill, fast-tracked fat floor. four immigration bills passed out of committee, weeks go by, month goes by, nobody hears a thing. why afrpblt we considering those bills, madam speaker? even i support this patent bill that we'll be voting on tomorrow. even from our friends in the keck community, job creators, major companies, they like this bill in many cases. but you know what they really want? immigration reform. they'll say, fine, you helped us out fighting a few patent trolls now get immigration reform done so we'll be able to create jobs for americans. that's what we're here for, madam speaker. uniting american families, creating jobs for americans. we can do that, madam speaker. by passing h.r. 15, by passing pieces and having a meal, however you want to do it. in fact, how about we invite our friends from across the aisle, republicans, to join us here next week to talk about immigration reform? and the path forward.
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we've been down here every week since the senate passed comprehensive immigration reform demanding that the house bring up pieces or bring up comprehensive. we invite our republican friends to discuss this with us. there is no democratic or republican solution. this takes us working together for an american solution. we know that, madam speaker. h.r. 15's not a democratic bill or a republican bill. it's a bipartisan bill. principals from both parties, more than 2/3 of the senate support it. it's a commonsense approach. we should improve upon the pieces and have a meal. or we can pass comprehensive immigration reform to reflect our values as americans and create jobs for americans and to protect our borders. the longer that we fail to act, the more men and women will have to be in these galleries here, madam speaker. perhaps against your wishes. will have to be fasting. will have to quit their jobs, working in congress. like erica, because her mother is facing deportation.
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is that the america we want, when we look at ourselves in the mirror? madam speaker, is that what we're proud of as americans? is that our values? are we proud that a young talented staff person like erica, working on behalf of her country, for her congresswoman here in the united states capitol, has to quit her job because our own government is deporting her mother, who hasn't committed any criminal violation or violent crime? at a cost to taxpayers of tens of thousands of dollars per deportation and at the cost of tearing a family apart. and preventing erica from offering all that she had to give. to our great country. we can do better, madam speaker. we can do better by the handleful of people in this gallery and the millions -- handful of people in this gallery and the millions of people across this country who are demanding action now. and the hundreds of millions, yes, every american man, woman and child, who stand to benefit by immediate action here in the house of representatives. i yield back the balance of my ime.
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the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentlewoman from ohio seek recognition? ms. kaptur: i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized for one minute. ms. kaptur: madam speaker, i rise tonight to associate myself with the special order opposing any fast-tracked deal for the transpacific partnership or the t.p.p. trade agreement as it is called. it is simply the same old trade model that, since 1975, has caused this country to rack up over $9 trillion of trade deficit, more imports coming in here than exports going out. an incredible debt. we talk about the budget deficit, the reason we have a budget deficit is because we have a trade deficit. the outsourcing of jobs from coast-to-coast. there is simply no reason to bring up a deal under the fast-tracked procedure which will not permit amendment on
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this floor, a deal negotiated in secret by yet another presidential administration, and don't americans know how the middle class has been shrinking, how incomes have been shrinking, how production from coast-to-coast has been outsourced? i wish to place additional remarks in the record associating myself with the special order this evening that calls on the administration to rebalance our trade accounts. they could take up a bill that i have authored to rebalance america's trade accounts and take a look at all of these nations with which we have amassed these huge, huge deficits, with our production being outsourced. madam speaker, let's table the trance pacific partnership deal. et's table -- transpacific partnership deal. let's table this model. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentlewoman's remarks are entered into the record. ms. kaptur: thank you.
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the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentlewoman for a motion. ms. kaptur: i'd like to now make a motion that the house do now adjourn. the speaker pro tempore: the question is on the motion to adjourn. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. the ayes have it. the motion is adopted. accordingly the house stands
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>> there's a whole wealth of material here that talks about how ve for dance and
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deeply she was involved in it. >> watch our program on first lady betty ford at our website, c-span.org/firstladies, or see it saturday on c-span at 7:00 eastern and our series ontinues live on monday. >> as you walk in, there are tables out in front with lots of pamphlets. prior don'tering the gun show. and the pamphlets are all how the government's trying to take away the right to own guns and the government is doing this and obama is doing that and obamacare is terrible. those are the guys i wanted to talk to because those were were the guys with the leaflets, the ideas. they said, who are you? i said, i'm an academic, i'm a researcher and i'm doing research on these organizations, these ideas, and trying to understand the guise about it. and the men who believe this stuff. a bunch of them looked at me suspiciously and said -- sort of asked me questions and i said, look, here's what i am. i don't get it. so -- but here's my job. i want to understand how you
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guys see the world. i want to understand your world view. look, you will not convince me. and i will not convince you. that's off the table. what is on the table is i want to understand why you think the way you do. >> downward mobility, racial and gender equality. michael kimmel on the fears, anxieties and reyes rage of angry white men. sunday night at 9:00 on "afterwords," part of book tv, this weekend on c-span2. >> next, defense secretary chuck hagel and joint chief ofs of staff -- chiefs of staff announce restruck structuring efforts and a 20% staff reduction for their department. they spoke about this and several other defense issues during this briefing held earlier today at the pentagon. >> first let me make an announcement about something i
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said yesterday in regard to christine fox who will be our new acting deputy secretary of defense. i recommended christine to president obama because i felt we needed the continuity to continue with some of the most defining challenges that we have been facing, will continue to face in this department over a number of years. and you know what those are. it's budget, sequestration, we're finishing up q.d.r. review. and how all that impacts strategic interests and focus and where we go from here. she brings the continuity, she brings the expertise, the leadership, she has relationships, she is highly respected in the congress, in the white house, and certainly around here. so i want to acknowledge her for coming over to give us some
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of her time. she thought a few months ago she was going to escape. she did for a while. so, she will be an important part of how we go forward here for the next few months and i have great confidence in her and look forward to working with her again. i just spent some time with her this morning as we laid out kind of the next steps here for the next few weeks. i also want to take an opportunity to thank ash carter. we had a going away ceremony on monday, which some of you attended yourself. he will be greatly missed here. i will miss him personally. he has been a tremendous part of this institution for certainly the last five years and even before that. so i want to publicly acknowledge his service and sacrifices and what he's meant to all of us and we'll miss
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him. now, this afternoon general dempsey and i wanted to talk about some things that we are doing and decisions we've made to go forward in the area of consolidation and realignment and efforts to stream line our headquarters operations and particularly the office of the secretary of defense operations. and general dempsey will offer some comments on what he's doing with the joint chiefs. i think you all know that institutional reform has been an important part of what we have been trying to accomplish this year. it is not just a matter of being forced into that because of sequestration and budget
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reductions. that's part of it. but like always, all institutions, we are captive to and subject to environments, challenges change, threats change, and our world, our country, this institution is not in the same place it was 12 years ago. or even five years ago. we have in with -- come from one long war in iraq. we are unwinding from the longest war we've ever been in in afghanistan. different kinds of threats today. different dynamics. strategic interests vary. but the other part of that is that it doesn't mean that we are retreating from any part of the world. in fact, i'm leaving tonight for the middle east, to spend a
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couple of days in bahrain attending the dialogue and then over to qatar and maybe some other countries. but i will say in that speech that i give there, and it does relate to what we're talking about here today, that our interests, the united states of america's interests, are the world's interests. our interests are not defined by one region or one country or one area. d that's part of what this announcement is today, as we develop toward and into the next year on a lot of changes and adjustments and realignments that will be made in this institution, to better prepare this institution to deal with the threats and the challenges that not only are here today but what we
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anticipate is to come. cyber being a very good example. cyberthreats are real. five years ago it wasn't the same dimension as we now see. so, let me begin this way. and then i'm going to ask general dempsey to make some comments and then we'll take your questions. with the pentagon confronting historically deep and steep and abrupt spending reductions after a decade of significant budget growth, there's a clear need and an opportunity and i emphasize opportunity to pear back headquarters across this department and that is a result post-9/11 n era of that we have appropriately been focused on, had to focus on, to secure this country. our efforts have begun with the office of the secretary of
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defense and the joint staff. and today general dempsey and i will announce dkses and organizational changes within -- decisions and organizational changes within the office of the secretary of defense, the joint chiefs, that will result in budget savings and better align our structures and resources with d.o.d.'s strategic interests and priorities. earlier this year i directed a review. that review developed options to help d.o.d. plan for a range of future budget scenarios. including the persistence of sequester-level cuts over the next decade. and as all of you know, these cut, unless changed, will represent roughly a $500 billion reduction over the next 10 years and that's in addition to the $487 billion spending cut d.o.d. is already implementing. included in the strategic choices and management review is a comprehensive look at a savings -- all savings that
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could be achieved by reducing overhead throughout the department and streamlining organizations including o.s.d. and the joint staff. as you may recall, i announced this summer that d.o.d. would reduce major headquarters operating budgets by 20% over the next five years. these reductions are only a first step in d.o.d.'s efforts to realign defense spending to meet new fiscal realities and strategic priorities. difficult but necessary choices remain ahead for the department. choices on compensation reform, acquisitions and other major parts of d.o.d. these choices will be much more difficult if congress fails to halt sequestration and fully fund the president's budget request. congress must be a full partner in our efforts to responsibly bring down the defense spending. and to implement needed institutional reforms that maximize the use of our resources. and i look forward to working with congress next year in this
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effort. when i announced the 20% headquarters reductions, i made clear that they would begin in the office of the secretary of defense. subsequently, i asked former air force secretary, based on the initial findings of the strategic choices and management review, to lead a review of o.s.d. that would determine how to implement these cuts and consider opportunities for organizational change in streamlining. the secretary has completed his work and we are moving now ahead with implementing a new am -- a number of recommendations and changes in line with his work and the results of the strategic management review. specifically today i'm directing eesm of my principal staff assistants to begin implementing their plans to reach the reduction by fiscal year 2019. much of these savings will be achieved through contractor reductions, although there will be reductions in civilian personnel.
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ultimately other headquarters' elements will be implementing reductions and we'll detail these plans in the pentagon's budget next year. the o.s.d. reductions are comprehensive. touching many aspects of our organization, personnel and resources. we recognize that the dollar savings generated by the o.s.d. reductions, at least $1 billion over the next five years, is a small percentage of the sequester level cuts underscoring the challenges it faces the department in absorbing these very large sequester level reductions. still, every dollar that we save by reducing the size of our headquarters and back office operations is a dollar that we can be invested in real fighting capabilities and readiness. beyond these fiscal considerations, our goal is to use this opportunity to streamline o.s.d., making it more agile and responsive. a related goal was to reduce the number of direct reports to
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the secretary of defense. consolidate duplicative or overlapping functions and strengthen departmentwide management functions. with these objectives in mind, secretary donnelly's review took a close look at o.s.d.'s organizational chart and reform proposals. today i'm directing a series of changes that will reshape o.s.d. and i believe better prepare us for our future iscal challenges in an evolving strategic environment. first, we will be restructuring the office of the undersecretary of defense for policy. based on an extensive internal review of the organization, led by the current undersecretary of defense for policy, jim miller. this restructure willing better balance work load across policies, assistance secretaries of defense -- assistant secretaries of defense, sustain our emphasis n the asia-pacific region, cybercapabilities and better
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strengthen our security cooperation efforts while eliminating some senior executive positions, specifically the plan eliminates a deputy undersecretary of defense position and s.e.s. chief of staff, phases out the s.e.s.-led task force on business and stability operations, and realigns the portfolios of the five assistant secretaries of the defense for policy. the plan also eliminates four deputy assistant secretary of defense positions and their corresponding support structures through our consolidation and realignment of the policy staff overhaul structure. second, we will strengthen the deputy chief management officer, the dcmo position, by realigning the office of the director of administration and management and its components under the dcmo structure. secretary donnelly's review found that since its inception, the dcmo has lacked the resources and the mandate to effectively fulfill its role.
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as a d.o.d.-wide manager. meanwhile, the d.a.m. and others have important organizational management planning and oversight functions across the department and the national capital region will further enable the dcmo's work. the consolidation of these offices into a true d.o.d.-wide management office will provide for better coordination and integration of d.o.d.'s business affairs, including performance management and compliance, and result in a much stronger and more empowered deputy chief management officer. the dcmo organization becomes a focal part for d.o.d.-wide management, administration and business oversight, it's my intent to transfer specific responsibilities for business i.t. systems from the dcmo to d.o.d.'s chief information officer. i will work with congress to make this change, because it will strengthen d.o.d.'s ability to address growing i.t.
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and cyberchallenges. the undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics will continue to be responsible for acquisitions of i.t. systems. in order to consolidate intelligence oversight and privacy compliance functions, i'm directing that the office of the assistant to the secretary of defense for intelligence oversight and the defense privacy and civil liberties offices be combined into a single office that will be aligned into the new dcmo organization. fifth, as part of our overall streamlining efforts, the office of med assessment will report to the undersecretary of defense for policy. we will preserve o.m.a. as a distinct organization, with direct links to the secretary of defense. but this change will better ensure that its long range comparative analysis influence d.o.d.'s overall strategy and policy. sixth, i'm directing that the acting undersecretary of defense for personnel and
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readiness rebalance resources across our offices, three assistant secretaries of defense, in order to sharpen p.n.r.'s focus on force management, readiness and military health care and military compensation and retirement reform. seventh, i'm directing the undersecretary of defense for intelligence to move forward with planning for how its mission and focus should evolve after the drawdown of the povet 9/11 conflicts, including -- post-9/11 conflicts. eighth, i've also approved plans for eliminating the five remaining deputy undersecretaries of defense who are not approximately appointed or senate confirmed, fulfilling direction from the congress. to further improve the management administration of o.s.d., i am directing additional longer term follow-up actions to include refining o.s.d. budget categories, improving oversight of contractor support, of pleading a review of o.s.d. --
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completing a review of o.s.d.'s work load and a biannual review of o.s.d. to establish a regular assessment of the office's requirements. once fully implemented, these actions will provide for improved and sustained oversight of o.s.d. structure and roorses. -- resources. all these decisions will not only result in a smaller and flatter o.s.d., but one that i believe will be better prepared for the serious and complex 21st century security challenges that we face as a department and as a nation. in this constrained budget environment, we will continue to look for ways to reduce overhead, improve efficiency and maximize combat power. but we must do so in a delnt manner, after careful -- in a deliberate manner in careful way. most of the reduction in o.s.d. staff that i've announce today will occur through a process of natural attrition in order to
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minimize the impact on our work force. if the department is forced to take the steep sequestration cuts in the order of $500 billion over the next 10 years, we may need to implement additional reductions. as i've said before, sequestration is irresponsible, imposes an unnecessary risk to our military's ability to accomplish its mission and our rppedness. congress should roll back -- readiness. congress should roll back sequestration and fully fund the president's budget request which provides the department with the time, the flexibility and the certainty needed to strategically transition our military to a postwar posture. one final point, bureaucracies are often derided, but the reality is that an organization of d.o.d.'s size, complexity and global reach will always require sophisticated headquarters structures that provide effective oversight in
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manks management of our half a trillion dollar enterprise. the men and women who work with the pentagon and other headquarters elements, whether civilians, military or contractors, are dedicated individuals who deserve respect and appreciation. even as we realign our headquarters organizations, we will focus new energy on retaining the world class professionals who we depend on every day. to fulfill our mission and keep this country safe. my expectation is that the changes we make will empower our people by reducing layers of bureaucracy and making our organization more adaptable, accountable and agile. i know this has been a trying period for all d.o.d. personnel and their families, in the wake of sequestration, furloughs and a government shutdown. through it all, our work force has remained focused and dedicated and i know that they will remain just as focused as we work to put our organization on a strong path for the
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future. thank you. general dempsey. >> thanks, mr. secretary. i'd just like to highlight what the secretary said about -- there's some things we would have done, whether or not we were faced with the budget control act and this thing called sequestration. and before he mentioned our words, and it's worth noting again, the size of our headquarters. just as he's directed the office of the secretary of defense to make these changes, so too will the joint staff, the combatant commanders, the service chiefs, as well as three-star headquarters and above throughout the world. second, pay chen sation and health care. we have -- compensation and health care. we have said for some time that we need to adjust or slow the rate of growth in those activities in order to ensure that the overall volunteer -- all-volunteer force remains sustainable, as well as allows us to balance the force across modernization training, readiness and man power. third, excess infrastructure, we have it.
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and we need to begin to consolidate infrastructure, close certain parts of our infrastructure. and fourth, of course is acquisition reform where the goal is to make ourselves -- to get out of this pattern where things are acquired and delivered too slowly and too expensively. we can't do that ourselves. we're going to need help across virtually each one of these areas. and we'll be looking to gain support for that over time. it's worth noting that last week we entered our 13th year of combat in afghanistan. while simultaneously delivering much-needed relief supplies in the philippines, in the aftermath of typhoon haiyan. and while maintaining a steady state of presence in the arabian gulf, in the eastern mediterranean, and in the pacific, as back stop to our important diplomatic endeavors
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as a nation. so as we consider how to maintain our military strength, we must always remember our real strategic advantage and that of course are the men and women who serve in uniform. and so the purpose of all of the reform efforts that we've been describing here is aimed at ensuring that we preserve and actually enhance the leadership training and equipping of our forces, because in so doing, only in so doing will we be sure to keep our nation immune from coercion. thank you very much. >> a question for both of you on china. excuse me. with regard to this new identification zone, mr. secretary, you called it destabilizing. i'm wondering whether you talked to your chinese counterpart about this. do you think they should roll it back? and if i could ask both of you more broadly, what do you see the significance of this? are the chinese responding to
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the u.s. talking about piveoiting -- pivoting to the specific? or how do you read this move? >> as to your first question, i have not spoken to my chinese counterpart. about oken to our allies the chinese. s to your question, the bigger picture, what may be behind this. first, i don't know. but i would focus on one particular area here that general dempsey and the chiefs have put a lot of effort into and it was very much a centerpiece to the conversation between president shi and president obama a few months ago and that is developing a stronger military-to-military relationship between the p.l.a. and the united states. we have been working at that, both sides, actually.
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and you might recall that my counterpart, the chinese defense minister, was here in ugust and i hosted him here. and i've seen him two other imes in the asia-pacific, some were with me during those occasions. we are working toward a stronger relationship to build some mechanisms to address some of these tensioned issues, which probably are not going to get any less complicated in the east and south china sea. it's important for china, japan, south korea, all the stay s in this area, to calm and responsible. these are combustible issues. that's been a role that we have tried to play, the united influence that
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we have in that area, and with our allies. but this is a time when we need to carefully, all of us, work through some of these differences. and that's the position that we've taken. it is important that in an international community that's getting more and more crowded, that we all understand and have common interests in the preservation of open sea lanes and what's in the interest of our countries, our economy, our security. and we're going to have to work on mechanisms that help accommodate that, rules of conduct in other areas. and that's an area where we can continue to play a role and will. >> [inaudible]. >> well, i think we've made it pretty clear what our position is, the united states, on this.
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and it's not that the aid itself is new or unique. the biggest concern that we so is how it was done unilaterally and so immediately, without any consultation or international consultation. that's not a wise course of ction to take for any country. >> i have actually reached out to the schedulers to connect me with my chinese counterpart. i suspect that it will occur following the vice president's visit. i think it's probably worth noting that we're not talking about sovereign air space, we're talking about international air space, ajissent to sovereign air space -- adjacent to sovereign air space. as you know, the international norm, i think as you know, the international norm is that entering an -- you would only report if you intended to enter the sovereign air space of the
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country that declared that area. so it wasn't the declaration that actually was destabilizing, it was their assertion that they would cause all aircraft enter there to report, rarledless of whether they were intending to enter into the sovereign air space of china and that is destabilizing. >> i have a question. mr. secretary, and chairman dempsey, you have both expressed concerns in the past about the rise of extremist groups in the middle east and mainly in syria, where we see now militants aligned with al qaeda and some of them supported by saudi arabia are capable of threatening regional security. my question is, how do you see a way out of this crisis? and do you agree with what the ambassador said today, that the united states has to stop alking with president assad? >> first, it's been the position of the united states
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is a political settlement the appropriate and responsible way out of this. and as you know, there is a geneva two conference scheduled now in late january that will continue to pursue that path and that effort. also, as you all are well aware, the chemical weapons iece of this issue is on track . that's not insignificant. the united states has been working closely with our international partners on this, the opcw. we have, as you know, offered technical support, technology to assist in the destruction of the precursors and the chemical
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weapons themselves. so that's another dimension of this. i think that we continue and will continue, must continue to to a diplomatic solution this huge humanitarian catastrophe. t's dangerous, it presents new dimensions to an already unstable middle east, on all of syria's borders. so i think we are taking the responsible approach in pursuing the right action here. >> if i could add, my orders from the president have not changed. and that is to say, we are maintaining our presence and our readiness, our deterrence and our capabilities at heightened levels in support of the other efforts that the secretary just mentioned.
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secondly, you ask, how do we see our way through this? i think we see our way through this by recognizing this as the regional issue, not an individual -- this is not an individual country issue or an individual group issue. it's a network of challenges. and i think seeing it regionally and seeing how each group, some of which aspire to global influence, some of which aspire to regional influence, some of which aspire to local influence, and each of those requires a different approach, because they present a different threat. and so seeing it as a region and then working it through our partners is clearly the path that will allow us to solve this very complex issue, whether it runs from, as i've said before, beirut to damascus, to baghdad, or from afghanistan down into northern africa. and the last thing is, i'll leave the diplomacy to the diplomats. >> thank you. mr. secretary, the "wall street
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journal" reported that the administration is now reaching out to some of the islamist groups inside syria. is this an acknowledgment that al qaeda's getting the upperhand there and there's concern that if you don't reach out to these groups, you won't have any influence in syria, can you comment on that, both of you, actually? >> well, that's not my area that i deal with, the diplomatic track every day on this. i would just say that if in fact there's going to be a diplomatic resolution, if that is the responsible approach, and we are taking that, as i ve noted, as you all know, and the january geneva two meeting is on track to occur, if this is all going to come to some kind of a diplomatic solution, then all parties involved are going to have to be represented some way.
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i'll leave that up to secretary kerry and the administration to sort that out. but i think if that is the goal, that's the objective, to try to contain this, and i think general dempsey's comments about a regional issue is exactly right. then this can't be achieved by just narrow strips of interest in this. but again i'll leave that up to secretary kerry. >> if i could add, i think it's worth knowing whether these groups have any intent whatsoever to be moderate and inclusive or whether they are to be start, intend radical and inexclusive. finding -- in-inclusive. i've said for some time, there are more groups that brand
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themselves as al qaeda. now, where they stulely align themselves with al qaeda's -- now whether they actually align themselves with al qaeda's global terrorist ideology is still an issue. we're still learn being some of these groups. >> this is very complicated, as you all know. sorting out whose interests are whose interests and who represents whom. it takes some time to do this. i think the path we're on, as i said, is a responsible one. >> in the if you policy organization, how will you ensure that homeland defense and western hemisphere security still gets the attention needed and also in the q.d.r., there's a perception in washington that the q.d.r. hasn't accomplished that much. can you -- thus far, can you offer any new, clear evidence to the contrary? >> i don't know whose observations those are because i haven't seen the q.d.r. results yet. ecause they're not in yet.
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i suspect there's great speculation of what may come out of that. but the results of the q.d.r. are not in yet and i'm not -- i've not seen a draft of it. maybe someone else has. i doubt it. but the q.d.r. is an important mechanism that, as you know, that is put together by very knowledgeable, experienced individuals that help guide through recommendations. . >> we look forward to it. it comes at a very important time.
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it comes at a budget time, a sequestration time. it will be helpful. we have not seen the report yet. >> can i comment on that? one of the things that is coming out of it that began to be eliminated by strategic seminars about a year ago is that the homeland is no longer a sanctuary. ,f we are engaged in a conflict virtually anywhere in the globe, you may be affected by it. potentiallyuld affect the homeland in a way that it -- the homeland is achieving much greater
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ofminence in our discussions our future strategy that any time in my 40 years. as it should. as for the tdr, i should point out how difficult it is to do a in this qdr environment. any strategy has to balance its ways and means. the resources available, and what you are seeing is that we lookaving to manage and to at it through several different alternative futures. that may be what you are hearing reflected. we will eventually land at that alternative future. >> you are merging homeland of another position. >> we are upgrading it. because of the same point that general dempsey just made. i spent two hours yesterday with a general going through -- with
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him -- going through some new plants that general dempsey has spent a lot of time on. it is critically important. it will continue to be critically important. as general dempsey said. we are actually going to give more attention to that office as we streamline the process. the secretary of defense has access,ess, more direct as they work through the policy people. or whoever the secretary of defense is what have layers in between. that is very much part of the focus on that particular issue. when the report came back -- >> margaret brennan.
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kerryhanistan, secretary is suggesting today that would be security agreement hanging in the balance, it is your counterpart in afghanistan who might have the authority to finalize the agreement. is that an avenue that you are actually pursuing? if you could,, given the is there anhere, option where we are on schedule? >> i have not talked to secretary kerry about those comments. i would answer the question in this way. and presidenty karzai reached an agreement. and his security council signed off on it. tax thatement was the
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was pretty -- the text that was presented to the loya jirga. ethically -- enthusiastically endorsed that agreement. they encouraged karzai to sign it. every public official we have heard from in afghanistan has strongly supported the signing of that agreement. the issue of who had the authority to speak for the ,overeign nation of afghanistan i suppose the lawyers could figure that out. in, we would be interested certainly as secretary of thense, is whenever document he has agreed to. it has to go to their parliament for ratification, not unlike our senate. if it is ratified by their parliament, whether it is the minister of defense or the president, someone who has the
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authority to sign on behalf of i suspect that would fulfill the time commitment that we need. i do not want to wait further into legal territory. >> thank you. from our perspective, as you look at the agreement, what we need to account for is the freedom of movement for military personnel. we will have to be able to move freely in order to assist with tasks. legal protections for those who serve in afghanistan. -- legalnistan legal system is best described as nascent. it will take time to mature. we also need protection. as long as the document is considered legally binding by
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both rds, it will be a matter of food they decide -- who may we have options that will continue to allow us to engage regionally. we have other versions were removed move closer and closer into becoming institutional- based. told to plan for a zero option. clearly i understand that it is a possibility. given the current impasse. tony? >> in early december, our budget for 2015 had to be determined by the end of the month. how likely is it now that the pentagon and military services will have to adopt this alternate budget for 10 major cuts? are you excepting -- expecting
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that congress will help in the next few weeks? >> i do not expect any kind of rescue. underwent a very thorough strategic choice in management review process beginning last spring. we were looking at alternatives. alternatives that we may have to face. full sequestration played out. the president half budget. we have not seen the president's budget. we will work with him on this. as you know, it is all departments. what a strategic review was about is planning for all of those alternatives in the event that we have to pick one of them or go somewhere in between.
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that has informed us as well as we are going forward. we are going into institutional reform. the president's strategic strategies will evolve every year. all of the pieces that go into it our strategy to protect our country and the resources we have. and the planning. do we expect rescue? i know there are conversations that are going on, which i understand have been optimistic about maybe congress reaching an agreement next week. you all know about those. or before christmas. i do not know. everything is still rather uncertain. that is what has been the most difficult part of all of this for the department of defense.
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we do not have a budget. we are living with a continuing resolution on till january 15. we are uncertain on what will happen. we have to plan for all possibilities. this will get to an intersection here where we have to make some decisions. number and if something happens of congress, where there is a two-year agreement. those are some of the conversations that are going on. i would hope that congress would take some action. especially before they go back for christmas. they should not continue to let it dangle out there. the issue is also the national defense reauthorization act.
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for the first time 51 years, congress may not pass this resolution. that further complicates what we are trying to do here. >> of alternate measures for the budget are adopted, would are the implications? will serve programs be cut back severely? that's not initially. we're going to make sure that our forces are ready to deploy and maintain our presence. that will remain true. the way i look at sequestration and i have said this, for about 3-4 years, it creates a readiness problem. you cannot shed infrastructure and reduce weapons systems early
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in that. . the only place you can go to get the money is in readiness training. is that the depth of the cut where we begin to lose that that debt. we still have 12 men on the team, but only about eight of them are trained away we wanted to be trained in order to be competitive. we only havend, eight players, not 12. >> two more afghanistan questions. the u.s. has been encouraging what is the-- actual no turning back time that you need, assuming that the end of 2014 arrives, what is the amount of time you would need to get that logistically done?
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what is your no turning back timeline? >> we are not the limiting factor. nothing is your reversible. level where it a would affect the options probably in early summer. don't forget that we are not in this alone. we have 44 troops from contributing nations to have a different set of requirements to make their decision. we will see an erosion of the coalition. we will also see an erosion of confidence by the afghan security forces as they begin to be anxious about whether we will be there to support them. what really needs to be done now -- what is hanging in the balance in afghanistan is confidence. the afghan security forces are very careful -- capable, but they are not confident.
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>> the french are offering technical assistance. is?our question >> will you give to the french military assistance in africa due to what is happening at this ?oment >> we have been helping our africa, particularly efforts.h in their we will continue that relationship. >> we have been supportive of the french efforts up until now. we are in contact with our french counterparts. they have not made a formal request for assistance.
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we are close partners bilaterally and through nato. we will do whatever is within our means and capabilities. >> in a few moments, the head of the american federation of teachers beaks with reporters at the christian science monitor. hour, thean an chairman of a house subcommittee on communications and technology on his land to update the communications act covering television and other media. after that, and hearing on how the health care law will affect medicare plan. later, president obama on jobs, the economy, and income inequality. >> betty ford knew that she wanted to do something. plays and skits and
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vermont to bennington, where she studied at the school of dance. here are some of her no cards and her spiral notebooks where she kept notes. this was her organize her during this. . she carried this with her. she studied with martha graham in new york and worked for a modeling agency. then she went back to grand rapids again. find a whole host of things that you would find in any organizer. there are brochures on dance costumes, one of her sketches for a costume at a dance routine that she wanted to put on. madeography notes that she four different dance routines. there is a whole wealth of material in here that talks about her love for dance and how
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deeply she was involved in it. especially in her early years. watch a program on first lady betty ford on our website c- irstladies or see it saturday. on monday, we look at first lady roselyn, carter -- roselyn carter. >> randi weingarten criticize -- input from -- implication implementation of the common core educational standards. she said wall street interests are responsible. she spoke to reporters at a breakfast hosted by the christian science monitor. >> our guest is randi weingarten, president of the american federation of teachers. this is her first visit with the group. an early look at the joys of helping children learn to turn mother was a teacher.
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she earned degrees from cornell university and a law degree from cardozo school of law. she worked at a wall street law form -- law firm for several years. brooklyn while serving as counsel for the president of the united federation of teachers. she served as president for 12 years before her election as a ft president in 2008. that ends the biographical portion of the program. as always, we are on the record here. please no live blogging retweeting or other means of filing well this is underway. there is no embargo on the breakfast. our friends at c-span have agreed not to air video of the session until one hour after the broadcast is over to give reporters time to file. give me a nonthreatening signal and i will call on one and all.
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low on the subtleties scale, but nonthreatening anyway. he nonthreatening is what i'm concerned about. we will offer our guests the opportunity to make some opening comments and then we will move around the table. >> first of all i just want to say thank you for all of you for being here. and thank you for letting me engage in this give-and-take with everyone. can you hear me? i am an asthmatic. when i am sitting instead of standing, i have to actually really use my lungs. it is an interesting -- i riff on that a little bit, because it is interesting when i start talking about things like health nervous as, i know from my own days i years that the was having a hard time breathing, i was having a hard
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time in school. the days that i could actually read well, i was more focused. when i start talking about things like wraparound services and health nervousness, it is very primal to me -- help services, it is where primal to me. today, it is the day after pizza day. i am sure that most of you filed some stories about pisa and five following. y falling.owing -- sk i thought and good reporting and i want to thank all of you for that. we've been through this rodeo before. it is the third or fourth time have had somelts real combustion in the united states. having that data is really good.
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what is it say, that the united thees is pretty much at back of the pack for mathematics and science for the first time in 10 years. it has two or three things. number one it says that things like poverty, social economics matter. if you look at the state like massachusetts and connecticut that the well, and what they've done, and you look at the data when you pull it out and try to account for poverty, you see where the statistics are. there's more to this. there, we areop in the inane debate that we have been for the last 20 years. is, not whether
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poverty matters, but we'll can we do about it? it?hat can we do about the dominant educational strategy that we've used over the last 10 years is "no child left behind." that has been the dominant educational strategy. there've also been charter schools in competition and new standards, but that is the hyper testing, the sanctioning of teachers. that is the dominant strategy. what we have learned from the thatset of results is that strategy does not work to move the needle. are, but itwhere we is not what works to move the needle. that is when you start looking at, what are the other countries doing that allow them to outlast us? what do they do? i and not suggesting that we be similar.
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i am not suggesting that we should be shanghaied. but the united states is different and we have to look at some of the things that they have done and say, can we adapt that here? let me explain for things and then i will go to what we are trying to do to accomplish that. >> you have four minutes more. >> that is ok. number one, the countries that outcompete us, they actually really value, and deeply respect and value, public education. -- i'm sayingts that to my friends who are examiners, they have a big caution flag about the data. it is important to look at, but they have a big caution flag about choice and competition. that has increased segregation and poverty. they'veries like chile,
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used it at the dominant education theory. they are preparing teachers, supporting teachers, giving them time to collaborate. as tom friedman has seen in shanghai and has written about. number three, parents are really engaged. parents are really engage not just in terms of being told what to do, but they are very engaged. number four, the common core matters. standards matter. but they must be done the right way, not just thrown out there and told to go do it. it must be implemented well. you see that in countries that outcompete us. poverty matters, but we have to and with equity investments equity strategies in order to address that. ,hings like prekindergarten like wraparound services that is what it says. the bottom line is, what do you
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do about it? there are a whole bunch of groups, including our union and other groups. there is a group of community who actuallyents, started talking about this for the last two or three years. we have what we call now the "principles for unity." we plan to reclaim public education, not as it is today, not as it was 50 years ago, but to be something that fulfills our collective responsibility for individual opportunity for all kids. that means, doing things such as, having well-prepared teachers. if teachers are well prepared and if they are supported, and if they still cannot do their job, they should not be there. but we should have fair of valuations.
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we also have to have standards. i am a big believer in the common core, but they have to be implemented right. we have to do what california has done. suspend testing for the time being so we can actually prepare and make these work. number three, we have to focus on poverty and how we ensure that kids have a level length field. programs, the wraparound programs, every school that works, every district it works, we have to focus and make sure that those schools are welcoming, safe environments. safe, and collaborative environments. you cannot show me a school that works or a district or a state or a country that works where the notion of collaboration as opposed to competition, the welcoming, safe
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environment so that schools are central to the community, are not the dominant theory as opposed to testing and sanctioning. that is what we are trying to do. aligned witht are what communities need. we must rate neighborhood schools and try to make sure is apublic education hallmark of democracy and a propeller of our economy. most importantly, we must really make sure that we figure out how to enable all kids to have the opportunity to not only dream big, but achieve them. >> thank you. let me ask you one or two and then we will go to kimberly to start. let me ask you about the common core standards. you said, you think that obamacare is bad and the implementation of the common core is far worse.
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who is to blame and anyone stepping up to fix this? i am not a big believer in this. i am a union leader and i could easily say, this one, this one, this one. if we are not rolling up our sleeves and actually engaging, then we are in the same debate over who cares about kids. i care about kids, no, i care about kids. that is a debate we are having. let me just say, this is what i think is happened. we do education policy by precedent. i think the governor and the state she's right about saying, let's figure out a set of standards that are aligned to what kids need to know about the
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global economy. they move pretty fast about it. we were engaged with them and brought a lot of teachers to critique the materials and things like that. that is what matters. not involved, parents were not involved, districts were not involved. it felt like, because of the speed at which it went, and because the federal government incentivized through race to the top. -- the race to the top, it became toxic. as it starts rolling out in a lot of communities and a lot of john kaneperson like will stay to districts, you must implement. near to date has been through a tax cap. a lot of other budget cuts. the things that teachers actually need to do, work
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together, use the standard as a guideline on a straitjacket, have curriculum, method not happen. in a couple places it did, in a lot of places it did not. the big mistake that both the federal government made and king would say- to you, i was sick and tired of telling people what to do and then not doing it. that is not your job to tell people what to do. your job is to help navigate people through this again actual ship. york,uently, lester new there were in elementary schools these tests. a lot of people were not prepared. john king in marrakesh -- tisch said thel test results would be 30% less
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net's year than this year. the question is, how did they actually know the exact number? it creates teachers draft. you can actually figure out what the cut scores were and how to align it. lack of preparation for teachers, the lack of communication with parents, and the sense that you are using the data, andg the kids' you know exactly where the scores will come in. this year, what has happened is that because people did not fail the test, they do not have enough funding for actually real implementation. the state put something called "engage new york" on the website. some of the stuff is really good. some of it is not. if you go to a teacher, think about it. if you say, here's the website and here are 500 pages, just do it. it is a huge instructional shift. roguenot about
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memorization, but critical thinking, helping kids persevere, helping kids get through it. that is why there are a lot of ways of saying that it was not done in a way that teachers trusted. that,s did not embrace and you have to think about this is a huge new instructional shift. >> kimberly? >> do you anticipate that labor will, early? -- come out early? >> hillary clinton is someone that my union has supported for everything a job that she is either run for or sought. when she ran for senate in york ande, we were out there very supportive. when she ran for president in 2008, we were out there in support of.
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i think it is far too early to talk about any of this. she had noteard, even decided whether she was running or not. i think it is too premature. frankly, there's is a lot of work we have to do between now and 2014, 2015. we are spending our time trying to figure out how to reclaim the promise of public education and figure out how quality health care is something that all americans have and getting through the ups and downs of obamacare. i'm glad we fight is working better now. we need to work on affordable college, making sure there is retirement security or all -- for all. there is a lot of work to do the between now and 2015. >> i would like to get your thoughts on what happened and to treat yesterday. -- detroit yesterday.
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i am curious what you heard from your members in michigan about their concerns on their pensions. think the ruling is very -- mying morally and lawyer had on, which i do occasionally, i think it is wrong legally. obviously it will be appealed. let me talk about why i think it is wrong morally first. the pensions and the benefit plans are deferred wages. whether you look at the people in detroit or the people in illinois because we have also seen the illinois state legislature basically hugely cut
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pensions in the last 24 hours as well. pensions are people actually pay into their pension. detroit, in illinois, people have paid 9.0% per year. 80% of those do not have social security. this is their only retirement security. average pension is about $19,000. as i said, people contribute to it. what happened is that the deferred wages that people expected to get and need very much for retirement security, all of a sudden they do not have them at a keyword of time when they need them -- period of time when they need them. what happened in this country is that as people are getting older and older, instead of having more retirement security, we have retirement insecurity. jokerd people at the aarp
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that the new name for retirement is to get a job. 80'su are in your 70's or and you're paying for your parents or paying for your kids, -- my sister and i every month give my father a check. engineer worked as an and had very little retirement security because of that. he got laid off at one point or another and the pension that he has is very meager. we give him a check every month to try to make up for that. what does this mean? , in united states of america, the average amount that someone has saved if they are the breadwinner, meaning between
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ages 45-64, is $12,000. not $12,000 annually, but they have essentially $12,000 and social very. -- social security. what are we going to do about this 10 years from now? what are we going to do about this at a country in 10 or 20 years from now? what other countries have done is that they actually made retirement security a collective responsibility as a post to an employer responsibility. fewere're seeing is that and fewer people have it, not more. that is why i think we have a huge moral issue. issue, the banks in detroit were able to work out what they needed to work out before the bankruptcy. whos the people of detroit
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served in detroit who are now subject to the bankruptcy. the people who actually created some of this recklessness were there deals out beforehand. that i think is both immoral -- a moral and a legal issue. one of the issues that this ruling raises is about the import of contracts being inviolate under the u.s. constitution. that is why i'm saying there are a bunch of different issues here. i am really troubled by it. -- thist have a race kind of environment in this country. austerity, austerity, austerity. trickle-down economics. they do not create a program economy. a growing not create economy. the new pope has spoken out
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about this. when our country had a burgeoning middle class, it was because we had a shared austerity. -- prosperity. inhow many members you have detroit and how many you have in illinois? if -- i'm going to give you a very rough guess. about 3000-we have 4000 members. in michigan, we have about 15,000 members. aboutinois, we have probably about somewhere around 40,000 members. maybe 50,000 members. >> 19,000 members? >> that is the average retirement that someone gets. the average retirement that a public employee gets around the
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he 4000-20about what $6,000. -20 $6,000. anytime anyone spends a dollar of their pension, it creates two dollars and change in economic output in the community. progrowthng to have a , pro-investment, pro-middle- class economy? or are we going to keep having this trickle-down austerity economy. that is the real question here. in both ways as be a lot of lawsuits. the last thing i will say that illinois this as well, and why i think illinois in particular is political as opposed to economic. year, the union in
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illinois, led by the illinois federation of teachers, the unions in illinois actually negotiated with the state senate i pension package that creative roughly the same -- created roughly the same amount. that package went nowhere. instead, this one, which is actually taking -- remember what i said. this is now basically cutting annual cost-of-living increases that retirees had going forward. it is about 100,000. >> we will go to another question. your hand signal is so subtle. we will go to you after this. subject, do you
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have an idea of some other countries' and their collective responsibilities? everyone is worried about social security crashing and a lot of people will elect by the side of the road. what would you do question mark -- what would you do? things.nk two or three we have done this report. the afc did a report a few years ago. employees have to take a share of retirement responsibilities. that we have to pay into our retirement. most of these plants that you see that have been cut right now, it is because the government today pension holiday. this happened at the very same time as the crash on wall street. have that double whammy going in at the same time.
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employees have always paid in and done their responsibility. america, we have social security, whatever your personal savings maybe, and i would argue for a defined pension plan. ,here is a group of people people from kkr who have invested in a modest pension funds in wall street, and retiree advocates who are getting together and talking more how we should have professionally managed funds like those investment plans. they are actually far more efficient and more accepted than the defined contribution plans. world, id change the
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-ould actually link -- d-link - link pensions from employer responsibilities. you have that kind of legacy clause, like when you have right now in terms of the public sector. in the absence of that, we have to figure out how to actually help people. we have to help them get to a certain percentage of their income when they are working that they have in retirement. they should actually be able to live a life in retirement that they deserve. >> like the national 401(k) program? >> we can expand social security. frankly there'll be more and more of a question that all people have-- while
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more and more retirement insecurity. some of us are looking at whether some of these big, defined-benefit plans that states have, can you do with australia does? people can actually then buy in or participate in. it would be more efficient. it will be a more effective way of doing things. the laughing is, we have to have a national conversation about retirement security. if we do not have that conversation right now, what is going to happen in 10 or 20 years from now? of the population does not have a pension. time, what we have said in this report, and we can get you this report, is that people should pay into their pensions. there should be this three-
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legged stool. i will be happy to get it to you. the last thing we do, and this is something i've spent a lot of time doing, is that there is about $1.5 trillion worth of pension investments that are sitting in wall street investment houses right now. what happens if we could actually use the patient capital pension for investments in infrastructure? rebuilding america again, for creating jobs again? with theeen working clinton global initiative and with many of the teacher funds to do this. we have made a commitment about two years ago that we would find $10 billion worth of assets to do these kind of investments. we are halfway there. there is the new york city
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systems that have been invested in infrastructure. health warning systems have done the same thing. forave also done retraining the jobs of tomorrow. we have also done a whole bunch of work in terms of energy investments. there are a lot of things you can do with this patient capital in terms of helping readers in the infrastructure. >> we are going next to sean higgins. >> one of the issues that has up in the detroit bankruptcy issues is a collection that is valued in the billions. as an educator, do you support that? >> let me just say that the educators in the city have been ofer a different kind emergency manager for a long time.
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the governor had the first emergency management statute, but it was done in a much more -- it was done of a lot of conversation back and forth in terms of the educators. frankly, our members in detroit in thegely sacrificed last two contracts in terms of taking pay cuts and other things amounting to four percent. -- 12%. the city school system is working with the educators now. there've been a lot of problems. new emergency manager has been working with the educators. they are seeing some real turnaround. i want to give them props in terms of what they have done and what they're trying to do.
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up in rockaway county. , or 30 minutes away depending on traffic. watched new york city roughly go through the same agonizing process and make different decisions. toy could've made a decision declare bankruptcy, but they did not. they could've made the decision to sell great assets, but they did not. they made the decision, including reunions, the user pension funds to help by city bonds -- we made a decision for the long-term viability with
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lots of sacrifices through the 1970's. , indeed think about what is going on in york city right now, this is a city that is -- it loses life. -- it oozes life. there is a vitality now that you do not see in the rest of the world. watching the detroit decision, one has to wonder when you look at michigan, and look at the inequities in michigan, there is a great wealth and certain pieces of it, but what is happening in detroit? i do wonder why these decisions are being made this way. detroit can be a tool in that state. -- jewel in that state. i would caution against selling
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the kind of assets like that art collection. >> the problem of bullying continues to grab headlines. we have had so many high-profile and tragic cases. we have seen school districts -- acknowledging the reality of these cases. the expense of the programs they have to institute, what are your members' feelings on these issues of what needs to be done? if they're a federal bullying legislation?
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>> i am a big believer in trying to figure out policy that works as opposed to simply some kind of top-down policy is going to sit on the books and people are going to look at it as a mandate and do nothing about it. i don't think that answers your question, -- libby start this way. -- let me start this way. i'm gay. have had lots of -- i never talked about it for a very long time. middle ofrted in the 2007, 2008 and i talked about it i was in.l
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i talked about it publicly for the following reasons. after i talked about it from the pulpit that one day, i had some would seem to me teenagers, young women, come up to me, pull my sleep, this is 2007, and say to me crying, thank you for coming out. thank you for being a role model. iank you for showing me that can belie want to be. that when i grew up in not 2013s, but 2007 is where it is cool to be gay. this -- you didn't have to be closeted at that point in many ways. certainly in your city you do not have to. , it said something to me said more of a bullying than anything else in my life.
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it said that the fear of being yourself is something that we actually really have to be mindful of every single day that we teach. that is the same for teachers and it is the same for students. the question then becomes, what do you do to actually help kids not have that fear or that anxiety? and then what you do with the bullies? we have learned a lot. we have learned -- the bullying movie that was put out, i thought it was extraordinary. the first issue is education, education, education. that intervention, intervention, intervention. eileen to have the funds for things like conflict resolution in schools and teaching teachers how to see it. we need to teach teachers how to -- what to do about it. we need to have funds for
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intervention. some of this is stuff that we can do. some of this is stuff that we have guidance counselors and social workers in schools to enforce. some of this is how kc a trusting adult. -- how kids see a trusting adult. we have rubber bands. ours is purple and says "see a bully, stopping goalie." bully."a if you confront a bully and tell them to stop, most of the time that will work. we have to educate and we have to confront and we have to actually pay attention to the interventions for both those were bully -- those who are believed and those who bully. to that extent, we need the policy to make that a reality.
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but if the policies do not happen, it will be worse. we have worked with the administration about this. we are big promoters of the bullying movie. we have worked with the rfk foundation about this we have worked of cartoon network, we have done a lot of that stock. the second piece of your question, in terms of teachers. a paen tot do teachers. we are in an odd place in the next eight to america. you see this in terms of kids as well. teaching is so respected in other places. we are citizens of the mine. we are creating a future for kids. yet we are still in a space where we get demonized and
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denigrated. remedy is attempting to split the union from teachers. why is that the teachers are more densely organized than any other employee in the united states in america? they see that it is difficult for them. we need to do a better job as unions to make sure that our members are mobilized. when you take surveys of teachers these days, you see the line going up words. they want a voice. we need to stop td deofessionalization, -- the professionalization, as well as the tools they need. that are really to believe they are poor. teachers are getting piled on a child on. idea, is for teachers.
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when they say, i cannot do this and the 500 other things you've asked me to do, then people say that is an excuse. we cannot do that to them. i have watched it in the schools, in a charter school. it is goldeneye cocreated the new york. it had some of the best scores in new york city in the flat -- last-- last grating grading. it had higher grades than many other schools. what happened in that school? we did a different kind of contract. a great relationship between the teachers and the principles. we have great teachers and great principles. they do not have a set day, but
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they have a set number of classes. they actually teach the same material every day. they actually get to spend time at night thinking about, deeply, what they are going to teach and how they are going to teach. they have gotten a waiver that they give only one of the regions in new york city. they are focused and project- based instruction. when you talk to the teachers and the kids in the school. -- in the school, they have persistent in college rates that could not be about. 90% of hispanic kids who graduate from the school stan college. -- african-ap american kids who graduate from the school's stay in college. they are doing project-based learning. they are creating real engagement between kids and teachers.
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when you talk to the teachers, the teachers stay. they do not have the 50%, 80% attrition rate, and they talk about how important it is to actually teach, and you see the collaboration. we have about 15 minutes left. we will go to melanie, and several others. the administration is having labor-management art or ships, and i am wondering what you think the biggest obstacles are to achieving this, particularly when it comes to organizing and reaching collective-bargaining contracts, and what needs to be done over this? well, i think austerity, austerity, austerity

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